Features
- ULTRA SOFT MATERIAL & SCRATCH FREE - Ultra soft and highly absorbent microfiber cleaning cloths, great for cleaning windows, kitchenware, car or other delicate surfaces.
- ABSORBENT & LINT FREE - Made of 85% Polyester, 15% Nylon. These non-abrasive cleaning rags can soak up water from the countertop and tables instantly and without lint or streaks left behind. Clean with or without water, from worktops, appliances to kitchens, bathrooms, mirrors etc, they will make your house sparkling.
- TACKLE VERSATILE CLEANING JOBS - These premium microfiber towels are also perfect dish rags which don't smell, removes grease and particles from microwave oven, plates, pots or pans effortlessly. Not only that, you will be amazed they are also terrific duster that removes fingertips from silverware and glasses easily and leaves your kitchen spotless.
- REUSABLE & LONG LASTING - These microfiber towels feature high quality stitching with reinforced edges, they are durable and made to last hundreds of washings. They are lightweight, super absorbent and dry quickly, use them everyday to enjoy your cleaning.
- GENEROUS SIZE: Each kitchen towel measures 32 x 32 cm (12.6 x 12.6 inches), offering a good coverage area for efficient cleaning. Comes in a pack of 12 microfiber towels, providing ample supply for various cleaning needs around the home or office.
Specifications
Color | Assorted |
Size | 12-Pack 12.6" x 12.6" |
Unit Count | 12 |
Related Tools
Pack of 12 microfiber cleaning cloths (12.6 x 12.6 inches) made of 85% polyester and 15% nylon for cleaning windows, kitchenware, cars and other delicate surfaces. The lint-free, absorbent, scratch-resistant cloths have reinforced edges for durability, are reusable and withstand repeated washings, and can be used wet or dry for wiping, dusting and drying without leaving streaks.
MR.SIGA Microfiber Cleaning Cloth,Pack of 12,Size:12.6" x 12.6" Review
Why these cloths have become my everyday grab-and-go cleaners
Some tools earn a spot in my daily routine not because they’re flashy, but because they remove friction. The MR.SIGA microfiber cloths are firmly in that camp. A 12-pack of 12.6 x 12.6-inch squares, they’re big enough for real cleaning, small enough to stash everywhere, and reliable enough that I don’t think twice about reaching for one.
I put them through the usual house gauntlet—kitchen, bath, glass, electronics, and car—and then ran them repeatedly through the wash to see how they hold up. They’ve now replaced a jumble of paper towels, sponges, and “specialty” wipes for most tasks.
Materials and build
These cloths are an 85% polyester, 15% nylon blend with a medium-pile microfiber. The weave is soft to the touch and non-abrasive, and the edges are properly stitched with reinforced seams that have held up so far without fraying. They’re lighter than some plush, automotive-grade towels, but not flimsy. I’d call the thickness “everyday” rather than “detailing-grade.”
A quick note on feel: like many microfiber towels, the fabric can feel slightly grabby on dry skin, especially if your hands are rough or chapped. It’s not a defect; it’s the split-fiber structure doing its job. If that sensation bothers you, a light dampening of the cloth eliminates it and often improves performance anyway.
The 12.6-inch square size is an underrated sweet spot. Folded into quarters, it gives eight clean panels to work with, and it’s easy to maneuver around faucets, appliance handles, and car interiors without dragging excess fabric.
Performance around the house
Dry dusting: Used dry, these pick up dust rather than pushing it around. On bookshelves and TV stands, one pass usually did it. They trap fine particles well, which means less airborne dust after you’re done.
Stainless steel and appliances: With just water, I can get a streak-free finish on refrigerator doors, the dishwasher front, and the microwave fascia. My routine is simple: one cloth lightly damp for the initial wipe, then a second dry cloth for a quick buff. No polishes needed unless you’re dealing with heavy smears.
Countertops and sinks: For day-to-day wipe-downs, a damp cloth clears crumbs, water spots, and light grease quickly. If there’s a stubborn spill, I add a drop of dish soap and rinse the cloth; it rinses clean without holding odors.
Glass and mirrors: I prefer a two-cloth method here as well—one barely damp, one dry—and I consistently get a lint-free, streak-free finish. This isn’t an ultra-smooth “glass-only” microfiber, but paired with a dry buff it gets glass to a professional-looking shine with little effort.
Bathroom fixtures: These shine up chrome faucets and shower hardware without scratching. Water spots disappear with a damp wipe followed by a dry polish, and the cloths don’t shed lint on darker tile.
Electronics: For screens, I use a lightly dampened cloth and finish with a dry side. Fingerprints lift cleanly from laptop displays, tablets, and phone glass without streaking. For dusty keyboards and cases, they’re excellent dry.
Car interior: They’re great for the dash, touchscreens, and interior plastics. They attract dust and don’t leave lint behind on piano-black trim, which is often a trouble spot.
Delicate gear: On soft plastics and silicone (think masks or humidifier parts), the cloths are gentle and don’t leave residue. Used damp and wrung out well, they clean without scratching.
Absorbency and drying
Each cloth soaks up small spills quickly—more than you’d expect for the weight—and they wring out easily. After rinsing, they dry fast on a rail or the edge of a sink, which cuts down on musty smells and makes them useful throughout the day. If you’re replacing paper towels for wiping up water around sinks, these will feel like an immediate upgrade.
Care and maintenance
Microfiber is sensitive to laundry habits. To keep performance high, I follow a simple routine:
- Wash warm or cold with a mild detergent.
- Skip fabric softener and dryer sheets (they coat fibers and kill absorbency).
- Wash separately from cotton if possible to avoid lint transfer.
- Tumble dry low or air dry; they dry quickly.
Using this approach, my set has retained softness and shape after repeated cycles. Colors have stayed true and edges haven’t curled or unraveled. If you’re particular, color-coding by room (kitchen, bath, glass, garage) is an easy way to keep cloths hygienic and organized.
Durability
I’ve washed and reused these dozens of times now. The stitching is intact, no threads have popped, and the pile hasn’t matted down. They don’t pill, and they haven’t developed the dreaded microfiber funk, provided I rinse them after greasy jobs and let them dry fully. They’re not the thickest towels I own, but for their weight they’ve proven durable.
Where they fit—and where they don’t
These are generalists in the best way. If you want one style of towel to handle most household surfaces with minimal fuss, they’re spot on. A few boundaries are worth noting:
Glass purists: If you prefer an ultra-smooth, suede-style microfiber specifically for glass, you may still want a dedicated glass cloth. These do glass well, especially with a dry follow-up, but they’re not that slick, single-wipe glass weave.
Heavy grease jobs: For baked-on range grime or automotive grease, I’ll reach for a heavier, thicker shop towel or a scrubber first, then finish with one of these for the final polish.
Texture sensitivity: If the dry “grabby” microfiber feel makes your skin crawl, plan to use them slightly damp for most tasks. That solves the issue and usually improves cleaning.
Practical tips for better results
- For stainless steel, go with the grain using a lightly damp cloth, then buff dry with a second cloth.
- Fold into quarters to keep flipping to a clean panel; it keeps you from spreading grime.
- For mirrors and glass, wring thoroughly so the damp cloth is barely moist; follow with a dry cloth.
- Rinse thoroughly after tackling anything oily, then let the cloth air dry to prevent odors.
- Keep a set dedicated to screens and lenses; avoid cross-contaminating with kitchen grease.
Value
A 12-pack at this size is hard to beat for everyday coverage: one in the kitchen, one under the bathroom sink, one in the car, and several in the laundry rotation. Cost per cloth ends up low, and because they’re reusable for hundreds of washes with basic care, they pay for themselves quickly if you’re currently using disposables. The size and weight make them versatile, and I appreciate not having to think about which cloth to grab for most tasks.
The bottom line
The MR.SIGA microfiber cloths are a practical, well-made set that slots seamlessly into everyday cleaning. They’re soft, absorbent, lint-free in real use, and durable through repeated washes. The medium-pile texture handles dusting, stainless, counters, and glass with a simple damp-and-buff routine, and the 12.6-inch size is ideal for household work without feeling cumbersome.
They’re not the ultra-slick, specialty glass cloth, and they won’t replace a heavy shop towel for deep-degreasing. And if you’re sensitive to the typical microfiber feel when dry, plan to use them damp. But as an all-around, keep-one-in-every-room option, they’ve become my default.
Recommendation: I recommend these cloths for anyone looking to simplify daily cleaning with reusable towels that actually perform. They offer strong, streak-free results on most surfaces, stand up to frequent laundering, and the 12-pack enables easy rotation and room-by-room color-coding. If you want a single set to handle most tasks without fuss, this is an excellent, cost-effective choice.
Project Ideas
Business
Mobile Detail & Glass Polishing Service
Start a low‑overhead mobile car detailing or glass‑polishing service using high‑quality microfiber cloths as a selling point (scratch‑free, lint‑free finish). Offer tiered packages (exterior wash, interior detail, streak‑free glass polish) and market locally via social media, neighborhood groups, and partnerships with parking garages. Cloths are inexpensive and reusable—build margin by bundling with specialty cleaners and repeat‑service plans.
Branded Promotional Cloths & Corporate Gifts
Offer embroidered or printed microfiber cloths as branded swag for restaurants, salons, real‑estate agents, and corporate gift programs. Small order customization (logo, color) makes them useful, appreciated promotional items. Sell via Etsy/Shopify and reach local businesses with sample packs and volume pricing—markup is attractive because customization adds perceived value.
Eco‑Cleaning Kit Subscription
Create a recurring box that includes microfiber cloths, eco‑friendly concentrated cleaners, a wash bag, and simple cleaning guides. Target busy homeowners and environmentally conscious consumers. Use subscription pricing, encourage social referrals, and include seasonal kit variations (window‑care, kitchen grease, stainless steel). Microfiber cloths are durable so the focus is on retention through refills and complementary consumables.
Handmade Home Goods Shop (Etsy/Farmers Market)
Turn crafted cloth products (embroidered sets, mitts, reusable rounds) into a small line of handmade goods on Etsy or at local markets. Create lifestyle photography showing the cloths in kitchen/bath settings, bundle with small soaps or polishing sprays, and emphasize durability and washability. Low production cost lets you test multiple SKUs and iterate by customer feedback.
B2B Janitorial & Salon Supply Packs
Assemble wholesale packs of high‑quality microfiber cloths for hair salons, nail studios, boutique cafes, and cleaning services—offer custom counts, color coding, and simple co‑branding. Provide competitive pricing for recurring bulk orders and optional linen laundering service. Target small local businesses that prefer to source reliable, long‑lasting supplies with predictable reorder cycles.
Creative
Tie‑Dye & Fabric Paint Kitchen Sets
Transform plain microfiber cloths into bright coordinated kitchen sets using fiber‑reactive dyes or fabric paints. Create patterns (shibori, ombré, stencils), heat‑set colors, then sell or gift as matching dish cloth + hand towel bundles. Microfiber soaks dye differently than cotton—test one cloth first and rinse thoroughly; the result is a soft, colorful, reusable set perfect for farmer’s‑market stalls or craft fairs.
Embroidered Monogram Cloths
Add hand or machine embroidery to cloth corners—monograms, logos, or tiny motifs (leaves, utensils). Reinforce edges with simple stitching and offer themed sets (wedding favors, housewarming, B&B branding). Microfiber’s tight weave holds small stitches well and embroidered cloths can be marketed as premium, giftable cleaning or polishing rags.
Sewn Cleaning Mitts & Pocket Pouches
Sew two cloths together leaving a wrist opening to make an easy cleaning mitt, or fold and stitch into small pouches for glasses, phones, and jewelry. Add elastic at the cuff or a snap for convenience. These are quick to make in bulk, durable, and elevate a plain cloth into a functional, higher‑value item for retail or markets.
Reusable Beauty Rounds & Makeup Removers
Cut cloths into multiple circular rounds, serge or overlock the edges, and package as reusable makeup remover pads. Add a small mesh wash bag for laundry. Microfiber excels at removing oils and makeup without chemicals—market as eco‑friendly alternatives to disposable wipes or cotton pads.
Kids’ Craft Paint Cloths & Sensory Mats
Use cloths as washable art canvases for kids: fabric markers, water‑based paints, or stitched appliqué. You can also craft small sensory mats by layering and stitching textured elements onto cloths (tags, fabrics, felt). These are durable, washable, and attractive to parents looking for reusable play items.