The Neighborgoods Dish Towel + Sponge Cloth - Peas on Earth set features a green pea pod and leaf pattern, packaged with a brown and blue paper band. The Neighborgoods Dish Towel + Sponge Cloth features green pea pods, vines, and leaves on beige, with bold “PEAS on EARTH” text and green dots for a fun, eco-friendly look. The Neighborgoods Dish Towel + Sponge Cloth - Peas on Earth, featuring pea plant illustrations and the phrase PEAS ON EARTH, rests on a wooden surface surrounded by fresh peas and snap pea pods. A Dish Towel + Sponge Cloth - Peas on Earth by The Neighborgoods hangs over a faucet, with a potted plant and eco-friendly yellow bottle resting on the windowsill above the granite countertop. A hand holds The Neighborgoods Dish Towel + Sponge Cloth – Peas on Earth, featuring green leaves and text, over a kitchen sink. In the background, plants, a red teapot, and a green mug are seen on the windowsill.
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The Neighborgoods Dish Towel + Sponge Cloth - Peas on Earth set features a green pea pod and leaf pattern, packaged with a brown and blue paper band.

The Neighborgoods Dish Towel + Sponge Cloth

2 items

Why we love it

  • Combines the absorbency of a towel with the scrubbing power of a sponge.
  • Reusable and long-lasting, helping to reduce waste in the kitchen.
  • Made from natural materials for a sustainable cleaning solution.
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Scent: Peas on Earth
$25.00 $25.00 Save 0%

Dish Towel + Sponge Cloth $25.00

Free carbon neutral shipping on orders $29+. Arrives in 3–5 days. Free, easy 30-day returns.

This dish towel + sponge cloth Peas on Earth set is packaged ready for gifting, And your gift can keep on giving, 10% of the sales of this towel set will be donated to No Kid Hungry.

The towel is made from 100% unbleached cotton, it is not only super cute, but also super absorbent and gets softer with each wash. Great for drying dishes, wiping up spills, and adding a pop of color to your kitchen.

Each towel measures approximately 24”W, 26”L.
Designed, printed, and hand-packaged in the USA.

The sponge cloth is an eco-friendly replacement for your kitchen sponges and paper towels. Designed to add a pop of color to your kitchen and cleaning routine, while reducing waste. Holds up to 15x its weight in water, making it perfect for washing dishes, wiping counters, and soaking up spills. It dries quickly, so no smelly sponge smell and is washable to reuse again and again. Designed to eliminate waste, these sponge cloths will last for several months and break down naturally when thrown out or in the compost bin.

Dimensions 6.8" x 7.75"

Towel Is 100% Unbleached Flour Sack Cotton, Water-Based Ink. Sponge is 70% Cotton, 30% Cellulose, Water-Based Ink.

You can use the cotton tea towel to dry dishes, clean up spills, and hang to dry your hands in the kitchen (or bathroom). They can double as reusable napkins and make great gifts (and eco-friendly gift wrapping).

Machine wash in cold water and tumble or hang to dry.

The sponge cloth is great for washing dishes, wiping counters, soaking up spills, and all-around household cleaning. These sponge cloths are safe to use on any surface and are easy to clean—toss them in the washing machine or place on the top rack of the dishwasher. The pre-cut hole makes it easy to hang dry between uses.

Grove Values

A HIGHER STANDARD

Healthier cookware, pantry staples, and more.

From snacks to saucepans, every product is reviewed to meet strict ingredient and material standards — reducing exposure to unwanted additives and plastics in your food and kitchen.

Screened for unwanted additives

Made without BPA, PFAS, melamine, or artificial preservatives

Built for better cooking

Crafted from stainless steel, silicone, ceramic, and glass — not plastic

Less plastic, fewer microplastics

Reduced-plastic options that help limit waste and microplastic exposure

Go Beyond Plastic™ and microplastics.

Plastic products break down into microplastics that can affect human health.

Grove Co. is on a mission to reduce plastic in home essentials — for both people and for the planet.

Learn more on the Home Planet blog