
The details
Your house stops wearing the fur
The undercoat comes out in the comb instead of on your sofa, your clothes, and your car seats. Ten minutes, twice a week, and you'll notice the difference by the weekend.
How to use it (properly)
Most people ruin a dematting comb in the first thirty seconds by treating it like a brush. Don't.
- Start dry. Wet fur mats tighter. Take the loose surface stuff off first with whatever you already own.
- Short strokes, with the grain. Let the blades do it. If you're pulling hard, you're doing it wrong — and you're teaching your pet to hate this.
- Hit a mat? Work the edge, not the middle. Outside in. Picking at the centre hurts and doesn't work.
- Go gently over sensitive areas — belly, behind the legs, under the collar. These are the spots mats hide, and the spots pets object to.
Five to ten minutes, two or three times a week in spring and autumn. Less the rest of the year. Your pet will fidget for the first minute and then forget you're there.
It won't wreck the coat
It only lifts what had already let go. What's still attached stays attached — no thinning, no bald patches, no tracks. Your dog still looks like your dog.
TangleFree™vs Others
Most pet brushes are the same tool in a different colour — a pad of bent wire that skims the top coat, misses the undercoat entirely, and gets through mats by force. It's not a bad brush. It's just not doing the job you bought it for.
|   | TangleFree | Others |
|---|---|---|
Curved blades that cut mats apart |
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Rounded tips that won't scratch skin |
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Reaches the undercoat, not just the top coat |
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Won't shorten or thin the coat |
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Cuts in both directions |
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Free worldwide shipping |
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30-day money-back guarantee |