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Saturday, 11 May 2019 19:13

Bonas to show offerings at Itma

Bonas will be present at Itma, Spain, June 20 to 26, 2019. A total of 10 jacquards will be operating on advanced weaving machines throughout the show. A multitude of colors in both warp and weft can be expertly intertwined to produce top quality flat woven carpet, as will be demonstrated by a Bonas Si21 on top of an Itema R9500-2 rapier machine.

Bonas supplies shedding systems to both the flat weaving and carpet weaving industries worldwide. Another Si21 on top of a Picanol Optimaxrapier will prove the smooth and low vibration running of this 21,504 hook jacquard at high speeds. Both jacquards are driven by the revolutionary smart drive, directly mounted to the loom and eliminating the need for a gear box. Total flexibility in both warp and weft is no longer a dream with the end-to-end control that Bonas will show with the successful Ji5 on a 190cm Smit ONE, without a warp beam. This provides total flexibility in weft and warp yarn composition, raw material and thickness. Difficult yarns in weft and simple yarns in warp without compromising on creativity allow the customer to always run at full speed without warp breakages or tension problems. Individual warp end control gives free rein to creativity.

 

A new study from DiCentral, a B2B managed services provider, and the Center for Supply Chain Research at Lehigh University, details the supply chain impact felt by retailers and manufacturers in the rapid development of e-commerce. The whitepaper, “Supply Chain Collaboration in Transformative Vertical Industries: Implications of Omnichannel and Dropshipping,” examines the motivations, challenges, benefits and supply chain implications of online shopping and home delivery from the perspectives of some 180 C-level executives and senior managers in retail and consumer product goods manufacturing.

Study participants shared the operational and financial implications associated with the shift from traditional brick-and-mortar stores to online e-commerce. These challenges are particularly acute in home delivery and order fulfillment models, where products are shipped directly from the manufacturers and the retailer no longer carries the physical inventory.

The study also shows efforts being made to keep up with the pace of change, the technological investments necessary to accommodate them, and the benefits and risks associated with this new online retail reality. The study suggests retailers and manufacturers who have adopted a high degree of digital collaboration have benefited most from dropshipping.

Spinnova has developed technology for spinning textile fibers out of wood and waste stream-based cellulose. Unlike the toxic viscose process, this sustainable process involves no dissolving or other complex chemicals. Also, the fiber has a uniquely small footprint and opportunities for circular fiber production are created. Likewise, this ground breaking technology also offers an alternative to the use of cotton, which is a strain to both land and table waters. This is resource efficiency at its best and also creates a value-added product that is attractive to the consumer, while mitigating climate change. In future, the biomass can be used to produce energy and textile fiber. Thus this will cater to the world’s biggest problem, a growing population that requires more and more natural resources to produce food and clothes.

Spinnova, a Finnish sustainable fiber company, is building a bio-based ecosystem for converting agricultural waste such as straw into textiles. Moreover, Spinnova is also in the process of commercialising its virgin wood-based cellulose fiber product with pulp producer Suzano. The new pilot factory marks a major step towards large-scale production of sustainable cellulose fibers. Spinnova has teamed up with clean energy firm Fortum. This has been piloted using innovative raw materials, especially agro residues.

Vietnam’s exports to Eastern Europe account for nearly three per cent of its exports. The potential not with standing, Vietnam has difficulties in exporting to Eastern Europe, including payment issues, inconsistent regulations in these countries, small size of orders, and lack of market information. Eastern Europe is Vietnam’s traditional and important market. The two sides have created solid legal frameworks for bilateral co-operation. Eastern European markets offer great potential to exporters given their relatively high GDP growth and less stringent quality requirements compared to western European countries.

The proposed EU-Vietnam free trade agreement would further boost trade between Vietnam and Eastern European countries, especially key Vietnamese exports such as seafood and vegetables, fresh and processed fruits, electronics and electronic components, textiles and footwear.

Trade between Vietnam and Russia is up 16.4 per cent from 2017 and 58 per cent from 2016. While Russian exports to Vietnam are growing faster every year, in Vietnam’s case it is slowing down. A change in Russian consumption habits and the less competitive prices of Vietnamese seafood are among the reasons. But Russian businesses want to move their garment and textile factories from China to Vietnam. Others are subcontracting Vietnamese clothing and leather shoe companies. This is a good opportunity to increase Vietnamese garment exports to Russia.

Friday, 10 May 2019 12:54

Piave Maitex to launch jersey line

Piave Maitex will launch a jersey line combining functionality with sustainable features. The two main elements in the line are the premium stretch fibre Roica EF and perpetual. Both these are premium Global Recycled Standard (GRS) certified sustainable ingredients. Roica EF is part of the Roica Eco-Smart family, constructed with more than 50 per cent pre-consumer recycled content, and perPETual is high-quality sustainable polyester born from a cost-effective process that reverses engineer consumer waste PET bottles.

Piave Maitex is an Italian knitted fashion fabrics producer. Starting from two key high-tech, responsible raw materials, as demonstrated by the GRS certification, the manufacturer has managed to create and deliver three unique functional fabrics, dyeable and transfer printable, that perfectly combine creativity, innovation, real performance and sustainability all at once offering unparalleled comfort, performance, and tenacity. Piave Maitex was among the first textile manufacturers in Europe to get the certification of the quality system for the production and design of elastic fabrics. Piave Maitex is one of the major European producers of elastic fabrics, underwear fabrics and sportswear fabrics. The company’s offer has been enriched to cover a wider range of applications, while staying true to its DNA that revolves around quality, performance and innovation.

Friday, 10 May 2019 12:52

A&E launches advanced threads

American & Efird (A&E) has a new line of advanced identification threads. One of the big challenges brands face today centers around authenticity. Loss of revenue, reputation, and brand trust are some of the potential outcomes of counterfeit products. A&E’s new thread line is designed to provide a tool, which adds advanced identification for greater visibility and transparency into the product creation process.

A&E is a manufacturer of industrial and consumer sewing threads. Known for its leadership role in innovation, product quality, and sustainability, A&E supports many of the world’s top industrial and consumer brands with thread products that require strict quality and performance. Through its global network, A&E’s products are manufactured in 22 countries, distributed in 50 countries and sold in over 100 countries. The textile thread manufacturer achieved its initial targets for zero-waste-to-landfill in 2015. American & Efird has also launched a new recycled polyester sewing thread. This is designed especially for athletic wear and high-performance apparel. The new thread is derived from recycled post-consumer plastic bottles and aims to provide textile manufacturers within the performance apparel, active wear, athleisure, and intimate apparel markets a recycled alternative to existing sewing threads. The air-entangled sewing thread is made with Repreve recycled polyester, a brand of US yarn supplier Unifi.

UK-base Corah Textiles has started commission knitting. The company currently employs seven people (four full-time and three part-time) and is looking to expand its operations. Corah also has a part time knitter and a Shima Seiki flat knitting machine programmer on a freelance basis. The company finishes or part-finishes garments and accessories and makes small production runs of accessories, lambswool and cashmere garments.

Corah offers all kinds of services, including hand-sewing operations such as pulling and tying-in of ends, stitching V-necks and crew necks. Machine operations include over locking, cup seaming, lock-stitching, buttonhole/button-sew, sewing back neck labels and care labels, inspection to bagging, and point to point body and collar linking. Corah offers linking in gauges of 4,5,6,8,10,12,14,16 and 20. From body linking to collar linking it’s comfortable in linking all products from various style shoulders and garments, pockets and trims and linking accessories. The link is for the middle market right up to high-end French fashion house products. Corah Textiles also has a few Shima Seiki flat knitting machines in 8 and 12 gauge along with warp scarf knitting machines and a pom-pom machine, where it makes small orders. It is in the process of installing washing/drying and pressing facilities, which hopefully will be done in the next few months.

Friday, 10 May 2019 12:50

Levi Strauss goes some way with hemp

Levi Strauss has launched garments made from a soft hemp-cotton blend in March. The denim icon found a way to make hemp fibers soft and blend with cotton, but in a way that uses significantly less water than the process used to turn hemp plants into a rough material. This will also help the brand future-proof its supply chain.

Levi Strauss started looking for cotton alternatives when looking at the growth trajectory of cotton demand compared to access to fresh water required for its cultivation and processing. It discovered cutting-edge research in Europe, where industrial hemp was already legal in many countries, and prepared a market-ready material after three years. The long-term goal is to incorporate sustainable cotton blends by using fibers such as hemp into all of its products. Levi’s is continuing to work on improving the quality of its cottonised-hemp to the point where it can be nearly half of a cotton-blend for most apparel as well as fully hemp for certain products. In five years, the brand expects a 100 per cent cottonised-hemp garment that is all hemp and feels all cotton.

However Levi’s doesn’t want to give the impression it’s out to fully replace cotton. Many years of research and development lie ahead. Plus it’s likely hemp will be just one of several natural cotton alternatives.

Denim brand ISKO will showcase its latest performance-wear innovation ISKO ArquasTM and, for the first time, ISKO VitalTM at this year’s fair for high performance functional fabrics and accessories –Performance Days. These two platforms cover a broad range of technical and style applications, offering cutting-edge solutions for those brands seeking new performance-enhancing features and exclusive technologies.

ISKO VitalTM, the world’s first woven compression technology platform, showcases unique solutions that prove the company’s long-standing R&D effort. Now in the process of being patented, this revolutionary concept can be easily used across several sectors, from sportswear to wellness to travel.

Compression technologies involved in ISKO VitalTM facilitate a pumping mechanism that has proven to be accountable for a wide range of benefits. Among these, fast recovery, superior durability, decreased swelling and enhanced sport performance stand out. The platform expresses its impressive potential through 18 different inspirational bottom silhouettes, combining both textile and apparel technologies.

Greatly influenced by ISKO’s expertise in woven technologies, ISKO ArquasTM provides ideal solutions for the outdoor, sportswear and activewear sectors. The platform consists of a wide range of textile innovations, bringing specific benefits to shape an advanced collection that features extreme freedom of movement and functionality. This collection has also widened its focus encompassing finish treatments so as to further enhance its qualities and benefits. To highlight the many different potential end-uses of its products, ISKO ArquasTM has been developed into five main demonstrative categories: active, outdoor, hybrid, golf and horse riding.

Friday, 10 May 2019 12:46

ITM 2020 shares introductory video

International Textile Machinery Exhibition, ITM 2020 shared an introductory video ‘Great Idea: ITM 2020’ on the website and social media accounts like LinkedIn, Instagram, Twitter and Facebook. The video attracted a lot of attention on digital media in a short period of time as many shares and likes followed.

In this video, important participants of the exhibition express their views about the exhibition. Exhibitors, such as Oerlikon, Picanol, Monforts, Savio, Effe, Uster, Stoll, Karl Mayer, SPGPrints, Loepfe, Beneks, Itema, Elteksmak, SSM and Mayer & Cie, highlight its international success. Accentuating ITM as a ‘global brand’, company officials reveal that this exhibition allowing them to meet with textile markets of Turkey and the regions.

ITM exhibitions are a meeting point of new, extraordinary and original ideas; and a platform for launching new innovations in the global market. The exhibition bridges the gap between the eastern and western textile worlds.