The Clean Breeze Collection
"The Clean Breeze Collection is a forced air face mask that pumps HEPA-filtered air around the user's face to keep the dust and allergens away while keeping them cool. The mask is used by lawn workers, woodworkers, and any other environment that is dusty and the air is potentially harmful."
Not a staged demo — this is Robert, one of our customers using the system while sanding drywall.
The dust conditions here are actually similar to what a lot of people deal with during body work, shop cleanup, leaf blowing, or dry mowing.
A lot of the irritation people feel afterward isn’t just “allergies” — it’s fine airborne particulate that hangs in the air while you’re working.
We thought it was worth sharing what real use looks like.
13/02/2026
🌿 What Some People Are Doing Differently During Yard Work 🌿
Over the last few posts we’ve talked about why mowing, trimming, and blowing debris can make some people feel miserable afterward — even when they try medication or a mask.
The issue often isn’t effort or conditioning.
It’s exposure.
During yard work you stay inside a cloud of very fine dust, pollen, and organic particles for an extended time. For some people, reducing that exposure makes a bigger difference than treating symptoms after the work is done.
Because of that, some homeowners and outdoor workers have started focusing on what they breathe while they work.
The Clean Breeze system was designed around that idea. It provides a steady flow of HEPA-filtered air across the breathing area while mowing, trimming, or running a blower, helping reduce how much dust and pollen reach you during the job.
People don’t use it to avoid yard work — they use it so they can finish the work and still feel normal the rest of the day.
If you’ve struggled with how you feel after working outside, you’re definitely not the only one.
— Clean Breeze Collection
🌿 Why Some People Still Feel Miserable After Yard Work 🌿
A lot of people try to handle mowing season with allergy medicine or a dust mask — and sometimes that helps. But many still end up feeling wiped out after mowing, trimming, or blowing debris.
The reason is exposure level.
During yard work, you’re not just outside in fresh air. You’re walking or riding directly through a concentrated cloud of very fine particles: pollen, mold spores, and dust that were just disturbed by the equipment. For an hour or more, you stay right inside that breathing zone.
Medication can help your body react less strongly, but it doesn’t stop what you’re breathing in.
And many masks work well for short tasks, but during longer mowing sessions people run into other problems:
• heat buildup
• moisture
• air leaking around the edges
• discomfort that makes them take it off halfway through
For some people, the real improvement comes not from treating symptoms afterward, but from reducing what they inhale while they’re doing the work.
We’ll talk more about that soon.
— Clean Breeze Collection