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  2. 7 Irresistibly Soft Turkish Towels for the Bathroom, Beach ...

    www.aol.com/7-irresistibly-soft-turkish-towels...

    They are the best towels I’ve ever owned. They are high quality, extremely absorbent, and luxuriously large. I will not buy any other towel moving forward." Material: 100% long-staple Turkish cotton

  3. Terrycloth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terrycloth

    Terrycloth, terry cloth, terry cotton, terry towelling, terry, terry towel, Turkish towelling (formerly), or simply towelling is a fabric woven with many protruding loops of thread which can absorb large amounts of water. It can be manufactured by weaving or knitting.

  4. Turkish towel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turkish_towel

    Turkish towel can refer to two different things: a type of towel used in Turkish baths, such as a fouta towel or a peshtemal; Chondracanthus exasperatus, a seaweed ...

  5. Towel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Towel

    A fingertip towel or finger towel is a small towel that is folded and placed next to the sink or in the guest bedroom. Hosts often pin a note to these towels indicating that they are for guest use. [10] A golf towel is a small towel which usually comes with a loop or clip to attach to a golf bag for drying hands, golfballs, and clubs. [11]

  6. Peshtemal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peshtemal

    A peshtemal (also spelled peshtamal, pestamal, pestmal, or pestema ; from Persian [1] ~ Fa puştmāl پشت‌مال back towel § Fa puşt پشت back + Fa māl مال cleaning) is a traditional towel used in baths. A staple of Persian , Persian peshtemal had a strong influence on Ottoman culture, dating back hundreds of years, the pestemal ...

  7. Fouta towel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fouta_towel

    Tunisian fouta. The fouta (also spelled futa; [1] Arabic: فوطة) is a piece of thin patterned cotton or linen fabric, used in many Mediterranean countries and Yemen. [1] [2] Among other uses, they were worn, by both men and women, wrapped around the body while at the public baths in 19th-century Syria. [3]