On January 27, 2010, the 100th anniversary of Thomas Crapper's death, Cottonelle launched a "Great Debate" advertising campaign, inviting American consumers to vote their preference at a Kimberly-Clark website. The result was announced during the 82nd Academy Awards: 72% had voted over. In a more traditional preliminary survey of 1,000 Americans, Cottonelle found that "overs" are more likely than "unders" to notice a roll's direction (74%), to be annoyed when the direction is incorrect (24%), and to have flipped the direction at a friend's home (27%).
-- Edited by dorian on Wednesday 25th of September 2013 05:28:45 AM
Dunmowin said
06:48 AM Sep 25, 2013
I just make sure that the roll is "under" and not "over" Makes a huge difference, When the roll was "over" usually ended up in a vienetta on the floor. (still training MrD with this - he insists quietly in turning the roll around again)
To stop the toilet roll unravelling in transit just slip elastic band over the roll.
squash middle cardboard it won't be round then . Stopped our kids sitting and one pull and paper on floor.
al
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toilet_paper_orientation
On January 27, 2010, the 100th anniversary of Thomas Crapper's death, Cottonelle launched a "Great Debate" advertising campaign, inviting American consumers to vote their preference at a Kimberly-Clark website. The result was announced during the 82nd Academy Awards: 72% had voted over. In a more traditional preliminary survey of 1,000 Americans, Cottonelle found that "overs" are more likely than "unders" to notice a roll's direction (74%), to be annoyed when the direction is incorrect (24%), and to have flipped the direction at a friend's home (27%).
-- Edited by dorian on Wednesday 25th of September 2013 05:28:45 AM
I just make sure that the roll is "under" and not "over" Makes a huge difference, When the roll was "over" usually ended up in a vienetta on the floor. (still training MrD with this - he insists quietly in turning the roll around again)
Good idea