Faultless Heavy Starch 20 Oz - Pack of 12

Faultless Heavy Starch 20 Oz - Pack of 12
Faultless Heavy Starch 20 Oz - Pack of 12
Faultless Heavy Starch 20 Oz - Pack of 12

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Size20 Fl Oz (Pack of 12)

Faultless Heavy Starch 20 Oz - Pack of 12

List Price: $74.00$66.60DEALYou Save: $7.40 (10%)
Free shippingFree Returns – 30 daysFree Order CancellationSecure Payment2–3 Days DeliveryGet It June 22, 2026In Stock (6)No marketing spamNo account requiredFulfilment by FedEx / Amazon / UPS / ShipwirePayPal / Card Buyer Protection

Customer Reviews

Reviews sourced from verified Amazon purchasers
4.5
out of 5
Based on 3 reviews
5
67%
4
33%
3
0%
2
0%
1
0%
but I'm sure it'll be great.
Andrea WittJuly 21, 2015
I haven't used it yet, but I'm sure it'll be great.
Five Stars
H. C. PurdueFebruary 22, 2015
I use this for starching quilting fabric and it works "faultlessly."
Great value and great delivery!
JohnMarch 28, 2014
I've used http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B004SMAN44/ before... once. I had a 20 case of it, and those heads clogged no matter what. Every time I used them, pull the head, soak in water as directed, and they still only give one or two uses before totally clogging.

This Faultless spray starch doesn't do that. It performs just as well, but I've been using the same spray can on and off for over a year with no flow impedance. I don't even clean it every use, and the can has started to rust; but it still sprays like new, or close enough that I don't notice. No sputtering, no spitting streams, just perfect aerosol spray.

I've also used Faultless Liquid Starch, with less success. It works, but requires diluting or using a lot of liquid starch, and so manages to cost a lot more than just using spray starch. Spray starch requires more finesse to obtain an even application, notably at lighter starch levels where diluted liquid starch makes more sense. Water spray bottles, a vacuum ironing table, and copious amounts of steam help. Use a press cloth like the http://www.amazon.com/Protective-Ironing-Pressing-Pad-2-Pack/dp/B001I1P48S/ to avoid shine, otherwise you'll find your iron turning spots of heavier starch into a plastic-like coating that looks like dried egg whites.

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