Anti-pattern guide
One cloth ‘for the whole house’ is efficient until you grind bathroom film into kitchen cabinets.
Soil loading transfers between rooms.
Color-blind microfiber hides saturation.
Color coding, per-room bags, and final buff cloths that never touch toilets.
Why the same cloth room-to-room spreads soil is for readers trying to understand how cleaning methods, surface risks, and contamination types connect in a structured way.
No. Why the same cloth room-to-room spreads soil is a higher-level guide. Specific method, surface, and problem pages provide more targeted guidance when a relationship is known.
This guide connects to problems such as touchpoint contamination, based on the authority graph and guide taxonomy.
Structured guidance reduces the chance of treating the wrong problem, using the wrong method, or damaging the surface while trying to improve it.
The guide explains a mismatch between what people reach for and what the contamination and surface actually need. Fixing the label story without fixing the problem definition keeps failure visible.
Only when labels explicitly allow it. Otherwise you risk fumes, neutralized chemistry, or residue that reads as a new stain. Finish one lane, rinse, then reassess.