Three Rooms of Carpet Cleaning from Sears Home Services (Up to 68% Off). Three Options Available.
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Two-step carpet cleaning removes deep-down grit and grime from carpets, while Scotchguard shields prevent future stains
Choose from Three Options
$39 for three rooms of carpet cleaning ($120 value) $89 for three rooms of carpet cleaning with Scotchguard ($194 value) $129 for three rooms of carpet cleaning plus a hallway or staircase with Scotchguard ($265 value)
- Carpet cleaning of one room ($40 value each)
- Scotchguard (hallway or staircase) ($30 value)
- Scotchguard (room) ($30 value each)
- Cleaning of hallway or staircase ($25 value)
Scotchgard: Indoor Puddle Prevention
Learn more about Scotchgard's microscopic superpowers with Groupon's exploration.
If each of the threads of a carpet were a tree trunk in the rainforest, Scotchgard would be the dense canopy of leaves connecting them all overhead and protecting everything below. This invisible barrier is made up of fluorocarbon molecules that form a surfactant. Basic surfactants greatly lower the surface tension of liquids (causing them to break into beads rather than puddle), and the addition of fluorine can further lower a liquid’s surface tension by more than 50% while also repelling oil and grease. Scotchgard’s fluorinated force field can rebuff the molecules and subtle flattery of spilled juice and nacho cheese for up to one year.
Appropriately enough for a substance designed to handle chance spills, the invention of Scotchgard and its billion-dollar industry was itself an accident. Patsy Sherman, one of only a handful of female chemists employed by a major corporation in the 1950s, was developing a new form of rubber for jet fuel lines for 3M when one of her lab assistants spilled a few drops of synthetic latex on his tennis shoes. Sherman and her colleague Sam Smith realized that, although the spill wouldn’t wash out of the shoe, it also wouldn’t absorb any new stains. 3M began selling the formula as Scotchgard in 1956, and Sherman’s ingenuity was rewarded with an induction into the Minnesota Inventors Hall of Fame and a lifetime of party guests “just testing” her invention by spilling red wine on her carpets.
Two-step carpet cleaning removes deep-down grit and grime from carpets, while Scotchguard shields prevent future stains
Choose from Three Options
$39 for three rooms of carpet cleaning ($120 value) $89 for three rooms of carpet cleaning with Scotchguard ($194 value) $129 for three rooms of carpet cleaning plus a hallway or staircase with Scotchguard ($265 value)
- Carpet cleaning of one room ($40 value each)
- Scotchguard (hallway or staircase) ($30 value)
- Scotchguard (room) ($30 value each)
- Cleaning of hallway or staircase ($25 value)
Scotchgard: Indoor Puddle Prevention
Learn more about Scotchgard's microscopic superpowers with Groupon's exploration.
If each of the threads of a carpet were a tree trunk in the rainforest, Scotchgard would be the dense canopy of leaves connecting them all overhead and protecting everything below. This invisible barrier is made up of fluorocarbon molecules that form a surfactant. Basic surfactants greatly lower the surface tension of liquids (causing them to break into beads rather than puddle), and the addition of fluorine can further lower a liquid’s surface tension by more than 50% while also repelling oil and grease. Scotchgard’s fluorinated force field can rebuff the molecules and subtle flattery of spilled juice and nacho cheese for up to one year.
Appropriately enough for a substance designed to handle chance spills, the invention of Scotchgard and its billion-dollar industry was itself an accident. Patsy Sherman, one of only a handful of female chemists employed by a major corporation in the 1950s, was developing a new form of rubber for jet fuel lines for 3M when one of her lab assistants spilled a few drops of synthetic latex on his tennis shoes. Sherman and her colleague Sam Smith realized that, although the spill wouldn’t wash out of the shoe, it also wouldn’t absorb any new stains. 3M began selling the formula as Scotchgard in 1956, and Sherman’s ingenuity was rewarded with an induction into the Minnesota Inventors Hall of Fame and a lifetime of party guests “just testing” her invention by spilling red wine on her carpets.