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Roundup: Glass Napkin Rings

We've never used them personally...but we like the idea, especially when done in glass or wood. For napkin ring lovers out there, we rounded up a variety of glass types: from modern and simple to beaded and multi-colored; from Pottery Barn to Etsy, glass is a hot item:

 
 

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Roundup, tabletop & servingware

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Comments (8)

Napkin rings are like those little drink charms. They should just go away.

posted by arroyo on March 13th 2009 at 6:11pm
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My thoughts *exactly*, arroyo.

posted by tripleB on March 13th 2009 at 6:45pm
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Yes, I agree that napkins should be laundered after every use. Napkin rings suggest that they are going to be used more than once, which is declassé.

posted by bromelia on March 13th 2009 at 9:27pm
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I agree that they're unnecessary and somewhat naff (especially if monogrammed...).
But reusing cloth napkins - is this true? How do napkin rings suggest this? (aren't they just a decorative thing?) And does anybody out there really do this? I'm disturbed and intrigued.

posted by Melba123 on March 14th 2009 at 6:10am
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Yep, people actually do this! I grew up reusing cloth napkins for a couple days. We had a bunch of mismatched old silver napkin rings, which helped us keep track of whose napkin was whose, and monogramming would do the same thing.

I bet we see a rise in this as the same earth-conscious instinct that makes people use cloth napkins drives them to hold off washing them for a few extra days when it's not necessary.

posted by secondave on March 14th 2009 at 8:31am
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secondave, can you please suggest an instance when it would not be necassary to launder a napkin after use?

posted by bromelia on March 14th 2009 at 4:07pm
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Well, now secondave mentions it... I don't wash my bath towel after every use, and (at risk of being crass), it dabs places much more intimate than the corners of my mouth. So I can see, in theory, why it's probably really no more or less necessary to wash cloth napkins after every meal. Just like you'd put out freshly laundered towels for a guest, I assume you'd bring out clean napkins for dinner guests. But in a private, domestic setting, I can see now that this probably makes sense. If you're going to use napkin rings, I like the sound of mismatched old silver ones waaay more than modern monogrammed glass ones.

To be honest, I'm even less classy most of the time and don't use anything at all (ie cloth or paper) - our cloth napkins only come out when there are people over. I've never thought about this before. I guess my face just stays greasy until it next gets washed...!

posted by Melba123 on March 15th 2009 at 1:01am
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Melba's got it. If you're having a dinner party, of course you don't bring out the old things, but if you're a busy family and dinner happens to be relatively non-messy, why not use them again?

After spaghetti nights, yeah, they'd go in the washing machine. After broccoli and chicken breasts, maybe hold off for another day or two. This is clearly an issue of taste--where your gross-out boundary is, how messy your napkin gets in a meal--and that's all super personal.

The key is the mismatched set, so you know whose is whose and don't end up using your brother's napkin.

posted by secondave on March 15th 2009 at 1:53pm
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