SPEND $65 AND GET FREE SHIPPING

The Modest Blog

  • Pet Odors: Hardwood vs Carpet

    Pet Odors: Hardwood vs Carpet

    Pets don’t treat your floors differently—but your floors respond very differently to pets. The same accident, spill, or everyday residue behaves one way on carpet and another on hardwood.

  • Why Pet Odors Come Back After Cleaning

    Why Pet Odors Come Back After Cleaning

    You clean thoroughly. The spot looks spotless. A few days later, the smell is back. If this keeps happening, it’s not your imagination—and it’s not a failure of effort.

  • Odor Control for Homes With Multiple Pets

    Odor Control for Homes With Multiple Pets

    Living with multiple pets means more love—and more odor. When several animals share the same spaces, smells don’t just add up. They layer, overlap, and embed faster than most cleaning routines can keep up with.

  • How Pet Dander Traps Odors in Fabric

    How Pet Dander Traps Odors in Fabric

    You vacuum the couch. It looks clean. But a few hours later, it still smells like dog. That lingering odor isn’t coming from dirt—it’s coming from pet dander.

  • Why Wet Fur Smells Worse Indoors

    Why Wet Fur Smells Worse Indoors

    Your dog comes inside from the rain, shakes once, and suddenly the entire room smells unmistakably… wet dog. Outside, the odor fades quickly. Indoors, it seems to explode and linger.

  • Why Dog Beds Smell Even After Washing

    Why Dog Beds Smell Even After Washing

    You wash your dog’s bed thoroughly. It looks clean, smells fine… and then a few days later, that familiar odor is back. For many pet owners, this cycle feels endless.

Blog posts

  • The Underrated Power of Luxury Fragrances in Odor Elimination

    A clean home that still smells isn’t a cleaning problem—it’s an odor residue problem. Here’s how enzyme-based sprays and odor-killing candles deliver luxury fragrance while neutralizing stubborn smoke and pet odors at the source.
  • Why Most Pet Odor Solutions Miss the Enzyme Target

    Most pet odor products are built to perfume the air, not break down the residue causing the smell. This guide shows the failure pattern and the enzyme routine that actually stops recurring pet funk.
  • The Sidelined Role of Enzymes in Home Fragrance

    If your “fresh” routine keeps failing, it’s because fragrance masks the air while the odor source stays in fabrics and porous surfaces. Here’s why enzymes change the outcome—and how to build a routine that actually holds.