Glass Drinking Straws - bent
Go for glass - it's gorgeous in more ways than one. Trade in your plastic throwaway drinking straws for our elegantly bent, non-toxic glass drinking straws. Made from borosilicate, the safest and strongest glass commercially available are incomparable to ordinary plastic straws. They are not only free of BPA, phthalates and other potentially harmful toxic chemicals, but they come with a lifetime guarantee against breakage and each one is individually handmade with simplistic clarity. (Any broken straws maybe returned to the maker for recycling for postal details please contact us directly.) These reusable drinking straws are slightly bent to 'reach' your lips and at 9" are longer than our straight glass drinking straws. Single straw comes individually packaged in a cardboard box. Made by hand in the USA.
For help and advice or to order over the phone, call 778 340 5463 or toll free 1 877 216 5463.
More information:
Our transparent glass straws are dishwasher safe - and microwave safe too.
If you've delayed washing and are concerned about what may be on the inside of the straw, use our straw cleaning brush, which also works on our straight glass straws and our stainless steel straws. A simple brush and you'll see it's all good inside.
The lifetime guarantee: the makers behind this product are so confident about its durability despite it being glass, they happily offer to replace any broken straws. Simply contact us at Lavish & Lime if this is the case. (We're pretty sure it won't be.)
Unlike plastic straws, our reusable glass straws last so their frequent disposal does not become an issue for marine life. Plastic drinking straws are considered one of the 'dirty dozen'
of debris most frequently found polluting our oceans.
One reason why you should avoid use of plastic straws as prescribed in a Health Alert by John Hopkins University Medicine. "Some plastic drinking straws say on the label “not for hot beverages.” Most people think the warning is because
someone might be burned. If you put that plastic straw into a boiling cup of hot coffee, you basically have a hot water extraction going on, where the chemicals in the plastic straw are being extracted into your nice cup of coffee. We use the same process in the lab to extract
chemicals from materials we want to analyze."