These ecojiko bamboo and sisal pot scrubbing brushes are the essential eco purchase for your kitchen. Sold in a pair, the scrubber with harder bristles can be used for serious scrubbing whilst the softer bristled brush will have multiple uses throughout your home.
ECO-FRIENDLY: These scrubbers are made from natural, non-plastic materials, which will biodegrade rather than lasting years in landfill.
MULTIPLE USES: The pot scrubbers are a perfect eco alternative to your synthetic scourers. They scrub pans and clean crockery with ease. They are not just for washing up either. We also like to use the scrubbers for cleaning everything from vegetables, nails, muddy boots and even brushing beards.
BAMBOO & SISAL: As one of the fastest growing sustainable plants, Ecojiko use bamboo as an alternative to wood. No nasty pesticides are required to harvest the plant, which means it doesn’t harm the environment. The bristles are made from sisal, rather than plastic, which would take hundreds of years to biodegrade.
HARD & SOFT BRISTLES: One scrubber is made with harder bristles to help you vigorously clean those dirty pans or muddy boots. The other is softer, which is perfect for plates and beards!
5% of every sale will be donated to Surfers Against Sewage via Work for Good
Designed in Lancasahire.
Packaging: 100% recyclable card.
CARE: Caring for your brushes will lengthen their life and save you money. To protect them, remember to clean and dry out all of the brushes and don’t submerge the handles in water for any length of time or place them in the dishwasher.
End of Life Care: These scrubbers are fully home compostable.
Bamboo & Sisal Scrubbing Brushes
In stock
Ecojiko are a small family business based in the Lancashire Hills on a mission to inspire people to reduce waste and single-use plastics by creating a range of gorgeous, reusable everyday essentials with a playful twist.
The ekojiko founder of ekojiko, Katy's, journey started almost twenty years ago in East Africa where she lived and worked for many years. On returning to the UK she became frustrated with the amount of waste and single-use plastics on sale and in the bin! After living for years in a country where people reuse, refurbish and repurpose the contrast in the UK was astounding.
Roll on a few years and she set up ecojiko. To keep the inspiration from her time spent with the incredible waste-free mamas she named the business after the Swahili word 'jiko' meaning kitchen.
Beechwood, bamboo, sisal.