Dog hair seats
Author
Discussion

Richyboy

Original Poster:

3,746 posts

241 months

Wednesday 31st July 2013
quotequote all
Whats a quick way to make light work of dog hair covered seats? Hoover with brush does nothing, 3m roller does nothing, selotape nothing; the only way seems to be picking them off one by one with tweezers but theres thousands. The dog may as well be of the house of jor el. It would be good if there was some sort of kryptonite spray to melt them all down and wipe them off.

Webber3

1,228 posts

243 months

Wednesday 31st July 2013
quotequote all
Try one of these...


boobles

15,251 posts

239 months

Wednesday 31st July 2013
quotequote all
Either comb the dog with one of these http://www.google.co.uk/imgres?imgurl=http://www.a... so less hair on furniture or buy one of these.
http://www.google.co.uk/aclk?sa=L&ai=CfEEt0Cn5...


Mobile Chicane

21,848 posts

236 months

Wednesday 31st July 2013
quotequote all
Dyson Animal hand-held:

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Dyson-Animal-Handheld-Vacu...

I have this and amazed at the amount of hair and crud it picks up. Perfect for the car and soft furnishings.

CAPP0

20,559 posts

227 months

Wednesday 31st July 2013
quotequote all
Rubber gloves. Seriously. Put a pair of rubber gloves on and rub/wipe the area, it works a treat and even pulls hair out of carpeted surfaces.

TheThing

960 posts

158 months

Wednesday 31st July 2013
quotequote all
Webber3 said:
Try one of these...

Isnt that for cleaning windows?

Webber3

1,228 posts

243 months

Wednesday 31st July 2013
quotequote all
TheThing said:
Isnt that for cleaning windows?
Yes

C3BER

4,714 posts

247 months

Wednesday 31st July 2013
quotequote all
Bottom of your slippers or fine dust comb from your local pet shop.

Grey Ghost

4,608 posts

244 months

Wednesday 31st July 2013
quotequote all
CAPP0 said:
Rubber gloves. Seriously. Put a pair of rubber gloves on and rub/wipe the area, it works a treat and even pulls hair out of carpeted surfaces.
This, or use the sole of a pair of running shoes. Put hand in running shoe, drag across seat and the hair rolls up into a nice ball biggrin

rj1986

1,107 posts

192 months

Wednesday 31st July 2013
quotequote all
drop a sandwich there...always seems to come up with millions of dog hairs whenever i try to sit down and eat one.
Or this works well
http://www.dyson.co.uk/accessories/m/mini-turbine-...

FailHere

779 posts

176 months

Wednesday 31st July 2013
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My advice is to get someone else to do it, car valeter springs to mind (although one lot refused to do mine a second time), or, do you have kids?

Simpo Two

91,609 posts

289 months

Thursday 1st August 2013
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C3BER said:
Bottom of your slippers
Yep, I got a whole carrier-bag of cat fur out of my carpets like that!

gfunk

279 posts

236 months

Thursday 1st August 2013
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I use my trainers, I'm not old enough to own slippers yet.laugh

Simpo Two

91,609 posts

289 months

Friday 2nd August 2013
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I'm not training for anything.

Jasandjules

72,034 posts

253 months

Friday 2nd August 2013
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Slicker brush

RB Will

10,699 posts

264 months

Friday 2nd August 2013
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rubber glove works well but also rather than using the brush attachment on the hoover use the pointy one one the right of this pic

Rumple

13,963 posts

175 months

Friday 2nd August 2013
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I use a Meile hoover, its the 5000 series, much cheaper than a Dyson and from personnel experience much much better, makes small work of the dog hairs.

VTECBOY

352 posts

168 months

Friday 2nd August 2013
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Didn't clean my car of dog hair for a while. I usually just use my hand to scrap it off and that seems to do an alright job smile

anonymous-user

78 months

Monday 12th August 2013
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This brush that attaches to a hose pipe seems to be good at getting hair off the dog before it gets on the furniture!

I hesitated because I only have a hose on a cold tap, but he doesn't seem to mind!

http://www.hydrocomb.com/pets/default.aspx