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➤ HIGH-QUALITY MATERIAL – Lola’s Eco Clean Bamboo Dish Brush is a multipurpose, eco-friendly brush. Its scrubber fibers are made of eco-friendly recycled soda/water bottles. It is easy to use. It is the ideal brush for kitchen cleaning and scrubbing pots, pans and dishes.
➤ BAMBOO HANDLE – It comes with a naturally sustainable, ergonomic bamboo handle created to be eco-friendly as well as comfortable. It has a durable bamboo handle for maximum cleaning torque.
➤ VERSATILE – Bamboo is naturally sustainable and durable and this brush is great for cleaning fruits, vegetables, other types of foods as well as non-food objects as well
➤ HIGH-QUALITY MATERIAL – Lola’s Eco Clean Bamboo Dish Brush is a multipurpose, eco-friendly brush. Its scrubber fibers are made of eco-friendly recycled soda/water bottles. It is easy to use. It is the ideal brush for kitchen cleaning and scrubbing pots, pans and dishes.
➤ CONVENIENT EASY STORAGE – This eco-clean bamboo dish brush is a handy cleaning tool that comes with a built-in storage system. Its bamboo handle has a hang hole for easy storage.
➤ LONG HANDLE KEEPS HANDS DRY – 11-inch neck and thumb grip make it easy to clean deep pots and pitchers without getting your hands wet.
➤ AMERICAN OWNED & OPERATED – Lola Products is an American family-owned & operated company in business for over 50 years
➤ 5 Year Warranty (excludes normal wear & tear)
12 reviews for LOLA Eco Clean Bamboo Dish Brush, Multi Purpose, Sustainable Ergonomic Renewable Bamboo Handle, Fibers are Recycled Soda/Water Bottles – 1 CT
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$11.49

Phil Stracchino (Technical Thug) –
Gets the job done, and lasts well without mushrooming or shedding bristles
This well-made brush is the ideal size for a lot of kitchen-sink cleaning jobs, which is what I bought it for — scrubbing pots, scouring glassware my hand won’t fit into, etc. After several months of use, the bamboo head has lost a little of its finish, but the tampico bristles have not spread or mushroomed at all, unlike any synthetic-bristle kitchen brush I’ve ever found, and it hasn’t shed a single bristle. It’s stiff enough to shift dried or burned-on food, but soft enough that you won’t feel uncomfortable about using it on non-stick cookware.Seventeen months after purchase, I finally had to order a second brush as a replacement. Not because the first brush failed; it was still working fine and hadn’t even lost any noticeable number of bristles. I had to replace it because my daughter gummed it up solid with melted cheese while trying to use it to clean out a mac-and-cheese pot, and I couldn’t get the cheese out. The second brush quickly lost seven clumps of bristles all along one edge, but has not lost any further bristles since. Apparently the quality can be a little uneven.Eventually I got the cheese out of the original brush, but not too long after, both brushes disintegrated when the glue holding he head together failed. I ordered another replacement which, again, I used for quite some time before it disintegrated the same way.So: Overall, this is a very good brush for the job, the bristles won’t splay like plastic-bristle brushes do, and it will last quite a while. Eventually, the glue holding the head together is going to give up and it’ll fall apart. This may be sooner, it may be later. The quality can be a bit erratic. But it’s still a better deal, and works better, than any plastic brush.
Larry –
This one works! update 8/12
I purchased this brush after a dismal experience with the “Lola Pot and Pan Brush”. My need is primarily keeping my cast iron cookware and this brush works great. Plastic/nylon bristles melt and warp in boiling water, but these natural bristles hold up. The solid one-piece handle is comfortable and long enough to be functional.–Update–I have been using this brush to clean my cast iron pans for 8 months now and it has held up weel. no handles falling apart or significant loss of bristles. I am still happy. [8/6/12]
T. Haring –
Aesthetically pleasing but not up to tough scrubbing
I love this brush because it looks nice and it’s environmentally friendly. However, I had to buy an additional kitchen scrub brush (that isn’t pretty or environmentally friendly) for tough jobs because the bristles on this one fold under the slightest pressure. It’s great for a quick rinse of dishes but to scrub anything off I’ve had to mash the bristles completely out of shape to have any success. I still like it but if you only want to have one scrub brush, this probably isn’t the one for you.
Captain & Jen –
Pretty good but…
I am not quite used to the angle of the handle or the way the long bristles come straight out. I mean, the old dish brush had bristles that came out at different angles which made scrubbing the sides of kettles and the insides of tall glasses easier. With this dish brush, I have to turn my wrist a bit more, which is not really a big deal unless you have some carpel tunnel or tendonitis or something such. Other than that, I like the feel of the bamboo handle, I like the natural look of the brush, and the bristles seem to be holding up very well. I REALLY appreciate the fact that this brush is made of bamboo which is so environmentally responsible. Even though it is taking me a little time to get used to it, I would definitely purchase this dish brush again. UPDATE: This dish brush got fairly heavy use for two months then the handle came off. The bristles are soft which was great for cleaning nice dishes, however not stiff enough for getting the pots and pans clean if food had dried on them or burned on. The cheap plastic (ugh)dish brush I had before worked for a year. This lovely bamboo (yeah)worked for two months. Hummm… Not sure which way I will go when I purchase a new one.
Do It Herselfer –
Great environmental choice!
Love this brush. I use it everyday and haven’t lost any bristles. I use it in place of a sponge for washing dishes. For baked on food or dishes that need scouring I suggest soaking as the bristles aren’t super stiff,Update…I bought mine 15 months ago and I’m just now replacing it because the bristles are a little mangled. I actually take responsibility for this because I got lazy about rinsing it out. I keep mine stored standing up in the sink and have no problems with smells or breakage. I love this scrubber!
Stephanie Becke D Becker –
Broke within the first month.
The scrub brush was just what I was looking for. It felt good in my hand and it worked well. I liked that it was eco friendly. Unfortunately it fell apart after three weeks. The part with the bristles fell off from the handle. Had it stayed together for 6 months I would recommend it, but it’s hard to recommend something that fell apart after a short amount of time.
checkov59 –
Came unglued after 2 weeks
I bought this brush because I have done my dish washing with recycled bristles for the last 10 years and found them to be much easier to wash with compared to regular plastic bristles that have always been too hard and therefore much more effort to wash with. Unfortunately my old brushes were discontinued and I did not do my homework enough on these brushes, so to prevent others from making the same mistake here is my conclusion: 1) Bristles are good and of the right strength but a little long and therefore loose there shape quickly. 2) Bamboo handle is nice looking and has a comfortable shape but lacks an important scaper to help with tougher baked in foods. 3) Bamboo brush unfortunately came unglued after only 2 weeks use, the brush head is unfortunately only glued in place (nails that would have to be made with stainless steel should also have been used) and with repeated exposure to hot dish water the glue literally dissolved and the brush head came appart. I will fix it using marine epoxy and a nail stapler using short stainless steel nails. This should do the trick, but will still leave me with the other shortfalls.
R. Loewen –
Holds up well over time.
Nikita –
Bueno Bonito Barato
THR –
I have bought three of these brushes through Amazon since May 2014, and two of them have fallen apart so far. One after about 8 months; the second after less than a month. The brushes are made from laminated bamboo, and the glue the manufacturer uses to bind the individual pieces together is not up to the rigours of surviving in an environment of hot, soapy water–which is, after all, where dish brushes live and work.I am on the third brush right now, but unless I get some kind of satisfaction out of the manufacturer, I will NOT buy another one when it (inevitably) wears out. One expects these sorts of items to die eventually…but the usual way is for the bristles to wear down and fall out, not for the body and handle to fall apart.
Istvan –
to be clear, i don’t recommend to anyone this Eco product (anymore) i bought last year : the bristles are decaying after a few weeks of use while the old brushes i kept buying since 2014(!) still look perfectly ok (see photo). the bristles in the past were made of virtually indestructible tampico fibres while these ridiculously expensive new ones are clearly made of cheapest plastic. i never saw any dish brush disintegrate so fast. check the bristles yourself with a lupe/microscope and/or with a match : plastic burns very differently from natural fibers. anyway, this is cheating or fraud in my eyes, selling this item as an eco friendly and natural product, and this to a hefty price…
Aleta Karstad –
I won’t use a plastic dish washing brush, as the bristles don’t grab the grease. Tampico is durable, flexible, makes good contact with the surface, minimizes the use of detergent, dries quickly, and never smells stale. Rubbermaid used to make one with a plastic handle, and I bought a few of them at a time, using a new one for dishes and the older ones for dirty stuff. I used the last of them for a long time until I finally found the Lola brush. The handle is ergonomic – it feels good in the hand, but I find it heavier than necessary and I’m afraid to whack it very hard on the edge of my enamel sink to shake the water out of it before I hang it up. Bamboo is plenty strong enough to be made into a lighter handle than this. It’s beautiful though, and does the job. The head just barely squeezes into the mouth of a mason jar so that’s okay, though a smaller profile would allow it into smaller jars, and if it had a carved scraping edge like the Plastic Rubbermaid brushes had, that would be handy too.