Tired of Cat Hair on Your Sofa? This Unusual Method Is a Fool-Proof Lifesaver - CNET

2022-05-14 20:43:39 By : Ms. Yoyo Zhou

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Does your furry friend shed all over? Here's how to remove dog and cat hair from furniture easily.

Dan is a writer on CNET's How-To team. His byline has appeared in Newsweek, NBC News, The New York Times, Architectural Digest, The Daily Mail and elsewhere. He is a crossword junkie and is interested in the intersection of tech and marginalized communities.

This story is part of Try This , CNET's collection of simple tips to improve your life, fast.

When you live with pets -- especially cats -- hair comes with the territory... literally. It coats your clothes, your furniture and even your food.

For most of my adult life, I've been pretty lax about cleaning fur off my couch. Love me, love my cats, right? But I recently invested in a nice $1,300 "grownup" sofa from West Elm that's upholstered in a gorgeous gray velvet fabric that's comfortable, stylish and stain-resistant. 

But it attracts fur like crazy. 

It doesn't help that I've placed it perpendicular to a glass sliding door and that Oliver and Simon, my 6-year-old domestic shorthair brothers, love to use the couch as their personal tanning bed.

So my curiosity was piqued when a colleague mentioned you could wipe cat hair off upholstery just by using a rubber glove -- no need to lug out the vacuum attachments or invest in pricey sprays or contraptions.

I decided to test this home hack scientifically. And to see if it worked across species, I had a colleague try it with dog hair. Here's what I did and how it panned out. 

For more household tips, here's how to fall asleep faster with a five-minute routine , how to start a fire with Doritos and how to wash your car without water .

For this hack, all you need is a pair of dishwashing gloves. I bought a brand new pair of bright yellow Libman "all-purpose" reusable latex gloves. And given that some people have a latex allergy, I also picked up a pair of Best Choice vinyl gloves to see how they did on the job.

The technique is easy enough: Put on a glove and then brush your hand along the fabric. 

Start swiping with the gloves on the area you want to de-fur.

I thought the glove might pick up the fur, like a lint roller, but instead it collected the fur in a pile, more like a broom would. 

After seven or eight swipes, I had a nice pile of cat hair I could pick up, leaving the area fur-free. 

This trick works on more than just furniture: I cleared fur off a pillowcase and lampshade the same way.

So it works on cat fur, but what about dog hair? CNET money editor Courtney Johnston tried it with her chihuahua, BMO, to check if this pet hack transcends species.  "He's got short hair," she said. "It's not super stiff, but it gets into the couch fabric, making it harder to get out."

Works with dog hair too.

But the glove trick worked just as well, gathering all of BMO's fur on Courtney's couch into a clean pile that was easy to pick up.

I'm not sure who first realized they could use their household cleaning gloves to wipe away sheddings, but there is real science behind it. Dog and cat hair hold an electric charge that makes them stick to many surfaces. 

The idea is that wiping rubber against the fabric on your sofa or chair disrupts that connection with its own static charge, letting you gather the fur together. 

Apartment Therapy recommends dampening the gloves before rubbing them over the upholstery. Unlike when using a dry glove, the fur did lift off and attach to the wet mitt, eliminating a step in the process. 

It also, unsurprisingly, made my sofa cushions damp.

Whether you wet them or keep them dry, you should set aside gloves specifically for this task. You don't want the same pair that scrubbed down the toilet seat delicately removing Garfield's fur from your Chesterfield.

If you have a latex allergy, using rubber gloves is out. So I tested this house-cleaning tip using a vinyl disposable glove. Unlike with the rubber variety, more of the hair actually stuck to the glove, and any excess fur was left in a neat pile I could pick up.

This trick works with vinyl gloves too.

 One downside is the cornstarch used in many vinyl gloves, which created a bit of a powdery mess. 

If you want a powderless version, you can find latex- and powder-free gloves from Clorox.

For more easy life hacks, learn how to stop the flow of junk mail , correctly clean your AirPods  and cut a cake without a knife .