Merry Wanderer of the Night [Search results for towel

  • A variety of towels in our life

    A variety of towels in our life
    Round us it is a lot of prophetic. Of them we so have strongly got used to many, that often we do not give them any value though it's not always justified. First of all it concerns towels which the person use constantly throughout all life.

    Towels are necessary in each house

    Bella CosaIn any house there are some various towels with which tenants and visitors wipe hands, the body, ware...

    The towel is the textile product of the rectangular or square form created specially for a wipe of any subjects, including bodies of the person. Towels have appeared many years back. About them there are mentions in the Bible and national legends of any people.

    Towels on appearance are very similar to wafers (therefore them and name wafer). They well absorb a moisture (three times better, than terry towels), perfectly mass, promote microblood circulation and a lymph. They can be used both for a wipe of ware and hands, and in a bathroom. In Hotel Bedding Collection Set — are often included wafer and terry towels.

    For massage special massage towels from the flax which unique structure helps a body to relax are created. With their help also it is possible to pound a body well.

    SobellaWell, and on a beach we, certainly, take a beach towel on which it is possible to sunbathe on the sun and to be wiped after swimming. Allocate also special towels for hands. These are towels of the small size which hang up in a bathroom or in a toilet about a bowl for a wipe of hands.

    Towels from velour weave from five threads. Four threads form the top and bottom basis of a fabric (them in pairs bind with each other), and the fifth — pile (it is a velvety thread more often). After end of weaving a fabric cut to separate the top basis from the bottom. Other name of these towels — Luxury Hotel Towels.

    Besides, towels differ on a material of which they are made. Certainly, most widespread of them is the cotton fabric from which weave towels many centuries successively. The cotton fibre well absorbs a moisture, does not collapse during the big number of washings and is steady against a friction which is inevitable at towel use. On Queen Bed Blanket always at a headboard put a cotton towel.

    SovillaTowels also make from silk, a bamboo and a paper. Silk towels beautiful, gentle and improbably magnificent, but badly absorb a moisture and instantly stick to a body. Bamboo towels very soft and gentle.

    From a bamboo weave beach towels since the bamboo fibre possesses cooling effect more often. From a paper make disposable towels for a kitchen room which perfectly absorb a moisture and effectively clear ware of a dirt and the food rests.

    The terry towel is the most favourite towel, gentle and soft in which it is pleasant to be turned after a shower or a bathroom. Weave such towels from the terry fabric which pile turns out for the account of free giving of loops of leaky tense basis. Terry towels perfectly well absorb a moisture, quickly dry and long do not wear out.

    Certainly, always it is possible to manage one towel for all occasions, always it is possible to buy not so expensive towel of so low quality, but, you see, when it is a question of such important subject as a towel, it is wrong and very unreasonable!

    Luxury Hotel Towels Here!

    VIA «A variety of towels in our life»

  • Weekly Geeks Round-up: Stuck on Series

    Last week, Weekly Geeks were questioned by Erotic Horizon about what they do when they get stuck in a book series:

    • What series do you read where you have had an issue with one of the books in the line-up?
    • Do you cut the author lose after one miss, or do you have a limit of failed books in a series before you toss in the towel?
    • What's your suggestion for that book that you struggle with in a series?
    At Mysteries in Paradise, Kerrie suggests that if you've been keeping up with a series all the way along up until the most recent volume, give it a pass if it's not working for you and just pick back up with the next one. Not every book an author produces is of equal quality, after all.

    Bernadette of Reactions to Reading is willing to give series she's followed for a long time second and even third chances - sometimes she's been rewarded, and sometimes not. She's also found it's not absolutely essential to read every book in some series.

    Sarah at Puss Reboots proposes some "shoulds and shouldn'ts" for making a series work.

    Mark of Random Ramblings From Sunny Southern CA is a pretty big series reader, and like some of our other Geeks, rarely gives up on a series entirely if he's been with it for a long time - but if a new series doesn't hook him by the second book, it's probably all over.

    And on the other side of the question, we have Gautami of everything distils into reading, who would much prefer to read stand-alone books over series in general.

    Thanks to everyone who participated in Weekly Geeks this week, and remember to check back tomorrow for our new topic!

  • When you can't get pass that series book

    When you can't get pass that series book

    Last week was the release of the latest installment in The Black Dagger Brotherhood series - LOVER MINE, the much awaited book by J.R. Ward. One of my blogger friend, Pattepoilue from One Book Away From Heaven is having a problem getting past one of the earlier books in the series to make her way to LOVER MINE.

    She tossed out a post asking for help in getting her mojo back on or some suggestion on what to do about the book that she just does not want to read.

    I am piggy backing on that post and tossing it out here to the Weekly Geeker's – to see how you guys deal with that book in that series that you are following, that is just not doing it for you.

    • What series do you read where you have had an issue with one of the books in the line-up.
    • Do you cut the author lose after one miss, or do you have a limit of failed books in a series before you toss in the towel.
    • What's your suggestion for that book that you struggle with in a series.
    • If you are not a series reader – Toss the question out on your blog, see what your readers think.
    We all have at some point have read a series book, or you might be in this sort of a bind now - use this post to find out what your readers think of series books.

    Mr. linky.
    Please leave all links on comment - once Mr Linky gets added to the post they will be moved over .

    Have a great reading week...

  • The Almost Moon, by Alice Sebold

    The Almost Moon, by Alice Sebold

    After reading Lovely Bones and Lucky, I was excited to read Almost Moon. My excitement didn’t last very long. Almost Moon is the tale of Helen Knightly, a divorced mother of two grown daughters. Her father having decades earlier, it is up to Helen to take care of her emotionally abusive agoraphobic mother. Throughout the book the reader flashes back to episodes portraying the strained relationship she had with her mother. The first several chapters of the book were engaging. Helen can no longer take the strain and frustration of dealing with her mother, so she smothers her with a kitchen towel. The reader is then lead through Helen’s ritual of stripping and bathing her mother, then pulling her down the basement steps and putting her in the oversized freezer. A little out there, yes, but completely plausible. The remainder of the book goes downhill quickly and I completely lost interest. Almost Moon might be a good book for those readers that haven’t read any of Sebold’s other work, and therefore have nothing to compare it to. But a diehard Sebold fan will definitely be disappointed with this one, as I was.