Can someone explain why aluminum foil is so damn expensive?

You want to become truly sticker shocked just look at the price of men's refillable razors!! :eek:


Oh I know! ... and mine shaves his head. He goes through them like mad.

I think the price increases have to do with the price of metal being high.
 
Yeah, I checked out Walmart's brand and I think for their small box (could have been 10ft?) was about $3. Just seems so expensive for something you're going to end up throwing away anyways.

I bought a 50 foot roll of Walmart brand last week..it was $2.94!!
 
Here is my foil alternative:

Wait until Dec 26. I go to Target and buy all the Reynolds Wrap, Saran Wrap, paper towels, Dishwashing Detergent, Tissues, Swiffer Items and such while everyone else is grabbing wrapping paper. Yes, all these items are Christmas marked at 50 or even 75% off.

I usually grab about 2-3 rolls of foil for about 1.25 each. That keeps me until next year and I do the same.

Sure the boxes may have snowflakes on them, but that isn't a big deal to me- same with the tissues and papertowels. The cleaning products usually just have a Christmas sleeve that is easily removed if you wish.
I never realized this! Thanks for the tip.:thumbsup2
 
Supermarkets, etc. do this all the time. Tin foil is outrageous. For the past two months a good NEW name ice cream has been 3 for 10$$. Now most have changed over. Tonight I went to the same place and it 3.39 per half gallon. These places don't stay in business by standing still. They get u hooked then go up!! :scared1:

Better double check that -- it's probably not a real half gallon either.
 

That's what I was going to say! Ice cream no longer comes in the half gallon size.

Blue Bell still comes in a half gallon! :) But it's not cheap. I think the cheapest I've seen it here in Colorado lately is $3.99 for a half gallon on sale at Sprouts. But I will happily pay $5-6 for a gallon of Blue Bell, considering how long it lasts. Compared to one trip to Cold Stone, or even Dairy Queen (which would run anywhere from $10 to $20 for the four of us (2 adults, 2 teens), a $5-6 half gallon of ice cream is a BARGAIN.
 
You want to become truly sticker shocked just look at the price of men's refillable razors!! :eek:

I heard on the radio the other day, that if you put the blade in a cup of vodka while its not being used they will last longer. Don't know if it actually works, but it's worth a try.
 
Aldi has aluminum foil for $1.99 for 75 ft.
 
yes, the price of everything seems so high but I bet it will not go lower (only higher) so get some coupons together, look for a sale and stock up!
With the price of razors (not just mens but womens) being so expensive, I forecast a bunch of hairy people in the future. (Me included) :eek:
 
I heard on the radio the other day, that if you put the blade in a cup of vodka while its not being used they will last longer. Don't know if it actually works, but it's worth a try.

This only really works if you drink the vodka before you shave. That way you're slightly numb and don't notice the dull blade doing a number on your face. Or wherever you might be shaving.
 
Don't buy the name brands!

Sometimes the store brand just isn't the same. We've gotten pretty careful about checking the store brand label against the name brand label since the shopping trip where we compared store brand sour cream to Daisy. The Daisy sour cream had 2 ingredients, cream and salt... the store brand had about 15! :scared1:
 
It will be interesting to see what happens with commodities prices due to what is going on in Europe and now here in the US. With a slowing economy here and in Europe, the price of metals, oil, gas etc are falling. You would think that helpful for many. Our government believes different though. They view deflation as the enemy. As others mention, we might be seeing more money printing to continue the effort to try and re-inflate the economy. In the end what will happen is more inflation and higher prices.

If you happen to be lucky and manufacture or sell an item that goes up in price, you benefit from inflation. If a consumer, with wages not rising, you loose due to higher costs with inflation. That's one way that wealth inequality is made.

Thought Dr. Weiss had a nice article about the inflation being created from money printing, and asset bubbles.

"The 800-Pound Gorilla in the Room"

http://www.moneyandmarkets.com/49557-49557?FIELD9=2

snippet:
...Suddenly and without warning, the pressure is building for MORE spending, BIGGER deficits, and a bigger pile-up of DEBT.

Plus, I’m talking about an enormous amount of money that’s already being created by the world’s central banks right now.

From Tokyo to Brussels and from London to Washington, the world’s governments are printing money like there’s no tomorrow. (See what I wrote about this last week in The Deadliest Vicious Cycle We’ve Ever Seen.)

Everybody knows about it. Everybody’s talking about it. But almost nobody has any idea what to DO about it!

This vast, massive, GLOBAL orgy of money printing — and the explosion in the world’s money supply that it’s creating — IS THE 800-pound gorilla in the room.

Already, that money has helped push U.S. stocks up to unsustainable levels as investors from all over the world pour new money into Wall Street.

Just since the first of this year, the Dow is up nearly 7% — and many household name stocks have fared much better …

Tractor Supply is up 42% … Polaris Industries is up 43% … Red Hat is up 47% … VeriFone Systems is up 50% … and Netflix is up 53%.

Plus Fossil is up 62% … LinkedIn is up 67% … Sears is up 67% … Cobalt Energy is up 73% … and Regeneron Pharmaceuticals is up 128%.

And this may surprise you given the global debt problems, but Bank of America has surged a mind-boggling 50% since January 1.

Now, you have to wonder: Is the company — Bank of America — 50% more valuable than it was just 16 weeks ago?

Of course not!

It’s still choking on toxic assets. It still has a Weiss Financial Strength Rating of just D+ (‘Weak’). Worst of all, the European crisis is erupting again, exposing the bank to major new dangers.

But the trillions of newly created dollars, euros, pounds and yen sloshing around in the U.S. economy have to go somewhere — and for reasons known only to themselves, many investors have decided that BofA stock is where they want to be.


Across America, Asset Inflation Is Beginning
to Pop Up in Some of the Most Unlikely Places

Stocks aren’t the only assets getting inflated by central bank money pumping.

Prices for some collectibles are surging, too. Art and antique auctions that just a few months ago were sparsely attended are suddenly packed to the rafters.

A vinyl banner posing as a work of pop art recently sold at a Woodbury, Connecticut auction for an astounding $15,990!

A friend of mine just finished planning his summer vacation. He says HALF of the places he wanted to stay were already booked solid. Instead of staying at posh resorts and spas, he’s settling for Hampton Inns and Motel 6.

Another friend is looking for a low-priced duplex or condo here in Florida. There are plenty in her price range, but on several occasions, as soon as she found one she liked, it was snapped up by another buyer.

The rental market is also strong in Florida. With a $100,000 property, you can get up to $1,500 per month in rent. That’s $18,000 per year, or an 18% gross return on your money before expenses — nearly six times more than 30-year treasuries are paying.

Everywhere you look, you see prices rising — especially if it’s related to an asset that’s the target of speculation. You see higher prices on clothing, e-books, grapes, fertilizer and health care products.

Why? Fed money printing is creating a temporary “wealth effect.” It’s also making millions worry about how much their money will be worth tomorrow.

Which of these blips are temporary and which are going to gain momentum? Which are just bubbles waiting to pop and which have real substance?...
 
Since aluminum mining is pretty destructive (tears up whole landscapes, it's not an underground type of mining process) there's a limited area that can be resourced. Recycling may help - I'm not sure how much aluminum is recycled into foil?

We reuse a lot of our foil. The stuff that covers an open can of beans turns into a catfood can cover, etc. The only foil we throw away after one use is the stuff we use on the grill.

I go through maybe 1 fifty foot roll a year - I don't even remember how much it cost last time I bought it!

(Same with plastic wrap and plastic bags - even the grocery plastic bags get used twice at home - once for lunches, then for cat litter!)
 
Since aluminum mining is pretty destructive (tears up whole landscapes, it's not an underground type of mining process) there's a limited area that can be resourced. Recycling may help - I'm not sure how much aluminum is recycled into foil?

We reuse a lot of our foil. The stuff that covers an open can of beans turns into a catfood can cover, etc. The only foil we throw away after one use is the stuff we use on the grill.

I go through maybe 1 fifty foot roll a year - I don't even remember how much it cost last time I bought it!

(Same with plastic wrap and plastic bags - even the grocery plastic bags get used twice at home - once for lunches, then for cat litter!)


I just bought a roll of foil made from 100% recycled aluminum. It's Reynolds. I don't remember the price, though.
 
my husband worked at an aluminum recycling plant for 22 years (just left them and started his dream job 2 weeks ago, YAY!!), and i can tell you, for at least the past year and a half, my husband worked 60-84 hours per week, and they weren't even keeping up with demand. i don't know how manufacturing/recycling costs figures into the cost of aluminum foil, but i'm sure it's a good percentage of it.
 
The rising cost of everything would be a political discussion, which we can't have.

But it sucks!
 
Here is my foil alternative:

Wait until Dec 26. I go to Target and buy all the Reynolds Wrap, Saran Wrap, paper towels, Dishwashing Detergent, Tissues, Swiffer Items and such while everyone else is grabbing wrapping paper. Yes, all these items are Christmas marked at 50 or even 75% off.

I usually grab about 2-3 rolls of foil for about 1.25 each. That keeps me until next year and I do the same.

Sure the boxes may have snowflakes on them, but that isn't a big deal to me- same with the tissues and papertowels. The cleaning products usually just have a Christmas sleeve that is easily removed if you wish.

This is true. I got gallon size ziplock bags that had Christmas print on them for .89 cents for a box of 20 at Target two days after Christmas. Needless to say we won't need ziplock bags for the next 100 years.
 



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