Weka, may I suggest that you look for a cure rather than treating the symptoms? If you are getting condensation on
all your windows you are probably not getting enough air circulation around the place.
Simply by being alive each one of us expires between 700ml to 1ltr of water a day in the form of vapour through breathing and perspiration, that has to go somewhere. We also raise the indoor temperature, even without heating, creating a temperature difference sufficient enough to cause condensation. This is most noticeable on glass - windows.
Single glazing and condensation were once de rigueur in the UK.
Everyone had them, but there were things we did to help reduce the condensation.
Keep all inner doors slightly ajar instead of closing them. Have a few transom windows open slightly, at least for part of the day and in rooms not often used, to allow air to circulate and be changed. If you can get hold of them, fit trickle vents to windows. And if they do not have them get thermal linings for your curtains. When closed at night the combination of curtains and vents helps keep windows clear.