Where to get neverwet




















It has poor adhesion and some opacity on plastic and glass, as noted in the instructions, and dries to a frosted color. It also has difficulty covering rough surfaces, and it gives off vapors when applied.

Get Ratings on the go and compare while you shop. Sign In. Become a Member. Remember Me. Forgot username or password? Not a member? Need further assistance? You can see that after five minutes of submersion, the leather became saturated, particularly around the stitching. Meanwhile, the boot on the right of the photo—the one that I did spray with NeverWet—shed water effectively and came out of the tub as good as new.

Equally impressive results arose from my test of the patio furniture seat cushion, which I hosed down in a way that would simulate rainfall. Where it encountered the NeverWet-treated cushion, the water simply beaded up and rolled off.

A few days later, I tried again and was satisfied to see no performance change whatsoever. The treatment worked equally well on the outdoor cotton chair cushion. Depending on what you are spraying, you can get 20 to 60 square feet of coverage per bottle. This post has been brought to you by Rust-Oleum. Its facts and opinions are those of BobVila.

The bottles claim to cover 20 to 60 square-feet each, depending on what you're spraying. It took us about three bottles just to cover the shirt, diaper, sponge, and formerly delicious snack cake you see below. And just like last year's version, the spray itself comes paired with a nice throat-burning sensation and a general scent of poison. If you ever want to cover anything actually substantial say, the outdoor patio furniture this product is intended for , you are going to need to shell out for a whole lot of NeverWet.

And what's more, it's probably not worth it in the first place. While the first NeverWet did have that unsavory residue problem, at least it kept your shit dry.

It was for heavy duty jobs, after all, a little stickiness sloughing off is understandable. But this batch is for your more delicate needs. Your sneakers, shirts, gloves, jackets, tablecloths, etc. And for what it's worth, Rustoleum definitely took that into consideration—it does dry to a near-invisible silky sheen. But with the less aggressive spray comes a far less effective product.

The sponge might as well have been freshly unwrapped. Unlike the original NeverWet-ed sponge before it, this sucked up water no problem. In fairness, it's not meant for sponges. But the shirt didn't hold up much better. There was barely any beading, and it didn't take more than a few seconds of pouring before the garment was pretty much soaked. With the diaper, we decided to see if maybe going to to town would help. And after expunging an entire bottle and a half of NeverWet on the baby bottoms, it sort of did!

Water beaded for a good 30 seconds before totally permeating the fabric, at least. Which is more than we can say for the shirt. Also, never put NeverWet on something a baby will wear.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000