Swish! Swash! Swoosh!

Your wine glass is most likely to break when it’s being stressed the most (AKA being washed). Use the beak of the Mitt to apply even pressure to the lip. Then swipe the stem, wipe the base, and you’re set. 1, 2, 3, and done.

1
Circle the rim.
2
Swirl the bowl.
3
Swipe the base.

Every Mitt needs
a home (base).

This base solves the age old question: “Where do I put my sponge when I’m not using it?” Here, of course. This base keeps a wet Mitt upright, dry, and ready for its next job-- no more soggy disasters.

Bonus: it also doubles as a jewelry dish, a VIP lounge for your rings and bracelets. Boom! Two birds, one stone.

Anatomy
of a Mitt

1
The Body

Made from the latest advances in open-cell polyurethane technology, our proprietary foam is designed to clean softly and gently without scratching.

2
The Holes

Designed to fit any
hand and all fingers. These finger slots (holes) 
give users ultimate control and dexterity in dynamic sink environments.

3
The Cut

Engineered to match the length of the average wine glass’ bowl.

4
The Beak

Open the beak to swirl the rim of the glass. Close the
beak to reach the bottom of the bowl. It’s like a scalpel for sink surgeons who operate on dirty wine glasses.

The Body

Made from the latest advances in open-cell polyurethane technology, our proprietary foam is designed to clean softly and gently without scratching.

The Holes

Designed to fit any
hand and all fingers. These finger slots (holes) 
give users ultimate control and dexterity in dynamic sink environments.

The Cut

Engineered to match the length of the average wine glass’ bowl.

The Beak

Open the beak to swirl the rim of the glass. Close the
beak to reach the bottom of the bowl. It’s like a scalpel for sink surgeons who operate on dirty wine glasses.

Washing glasses worth a mint?
Wear a Mitt, won’t you?