widely used, little research has been carried out to analyze the effect of the vapor. Boyd and Livingston [2] in 1942, and later Ward and Wu [3] in 2007 pointed out that the adsorption of vapor to the free solid surface is supposed to change contact angles because of the reduction in γ SV . In 1988, Yekta-Fard and Ponter [4] measured no change in water contact angles of water drops on Teflon when they are exposed to the vapor of cyclohexane, decane, or undecane. Several authors [5] studied the change of the surface tension of water due to the adsorption of organic vapors.In many natural phenomena and industrial applications, the sliding of drops on surface is important, such as coating, [6] energy conversion, [7] and water harvesting, [8] or for glasses or windscreens in rain. In these cases, one needs to discriminate between advancing θ a and receding contact angles θ r . The difference between the two is called contact angle hysteresis. It can be caused by surface heterogeneity, roughness, or adaptation. [9] Contact angle hysteresis is important because it determines the friction force of sessile drops: F = kγ LV w(cosθ r − cosθ a ). [2,10] Here, k ≈ 1 is a shape factor and w is the width of the contact area between drop and solid surface.Despite remarkable developments, the mechanism for drop mobility on surfaces is far from being understood nor controlled. In this respect, surfaces coated with poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS) brushes have attracted great interest because of their low contact angle hysteresis. [11] In a recent paper, we demonstrated that the contact angle hysteresis of water drops on PDMS-coated surfaces is further reduced, when the system is exposed to toluene vapor. [12] We explained the effect by the lubricating action of the vapor being adsorbed in the PDMS layer. This hypothesis was supported by an increase of layer thickness in toluene vapor detected by atomic force microscopy. That polymer brushes adsorb solvent vapors is indeed known. [13] Khatir and Golovin commented that the same reduction in contact angle hysteresis can be explained simply by a change in γ LV , γ SV , and γ SL . [14] As a result, the force balance at the contact line and the contact angles change. It is indeed known, that when exposing water to the vapor of an organic liquid,