This is a specific conversation about Cat grooming tools — what works for cats — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.
inparticular.ai
An Exotic Shorthair with vet-advised fold cleaning and coat brushing — that's a very specific grooming brief, and the good news is it's very manageable once you've got the right tools in place. Cats are particular about being groomed, and Exotics especially so — the right tool makes the difference between a cat that tolerates a routine and one that disappears under the sofa. Coat type plays a big role too. Before I point you anywhere: how tolerant is your cat of being touched around the face, and is the coat brushing mainly about shedding, or does your vet want you addressing texture and skin health too?
She's pretty good about her face as long as I'm gentle and quick. The coat brushing is mainly shedding — she leaves fur everywhere — but the vet said keeping the skin under the folds dry and clean is the priority.
inparticular.ai
That's really helpful. For an 11-year-old Exotic with that combination of needs, I'd actually separate the two jobs rather than try to find one product that does both. For the facial folds, unscented pet-safe wipes or a damp cotton pad are really what vets mean — nothing fancy needed there. But for the coat brushing and shedding, I want to ask one more thing: has she had any skin sensitivity issues, or is her coat generally healthy, just heavy on the shed?
No skin issues, she's just a shedding machine. The vet said her coat is in good shape for her age.
inparticular.ai
Perfect — healthy coat, heavy shedder, tolerant cat. For that, I'd go straight to the Furminator Deshedding Tool for cats, short hair size. It gets deep enough into the undercoat to pull out the loose fur before it ends up on your sofa, but it's not harsh on the skin. For an Exotic Shorthair's dense, plush coat it's genuinely one of the most effective tools available. Use it once or twice a week and you'll notice a real difference in how much she sheds around the house. For the facial folds, pair it with some Petkin Jumbo Face and Eye Pet Wipes — unscented, gentle, and sized right for daily use around the face without being fiddly. Between those two things, you're covering exactly what your vet asked for.
Would the Furminator be too rough for an older cat? I don't want to irritate her skin.
inparticular.ai
It's a fair concern, but with a short-haired Exotic who has healthy skin, it's fine — as long as you're not pressing hard or going over the same patch repeatedly. The key is light, short strokes and letting the tool do the work. If she ever flinches or pulls away, just ease off. Most cats actually lean into it once they realise it feels good. At 11 she's a senior, so keep sessions short — five minutes is enough — and she'll likely settle into it as a routine.
That's reassuring. I'll go with those two. Thanks.
inparticular.ai
You're all set. FURminator short hair for the weekly brush-out, Petkin wipes for the daily fold clean — simple routine, and exactly what your vet had in mind. Your girl is lucky to have someone keeping on top of it at her age. Good luck with her.