Archive for the ‘Fabric’ Category

Hemp – A true environmental Hero!

Wednesday, January 18th, 2012

Hemp fibres make wonderful Hemp fabrics

Can hemp truly be seen as an environmental hero?

At Gecco Interiors, we have always carried a range of beautiful, soft and vibrant hemp fabrics that worked equally well for curtains as domestic upholstery – Hardy Organic Hemp. Recently we launched our 2nd hemp fabric range, this time a textured, hard wearing yet gorgeous upholstery fabric mixed with wool – Hemp Plus. We thought it was time to examine the wonderful properties of this amazing plant for it is slowly becoming known as an environmental hero.

History

The first recorded piece of canvas is made of hemp fibres from 8000BC and it survives to this day! The Chinese created paper using hemp over 2000 years ago. During the great days of discovery almost all ships set sail using hemp ropes and sails. Pioneers crossed the newly found American frontier beneath wagons covered in hemp canvas sheets. Hemp seed was a mainstay in bread making in this country before wheat came along. It seems that hemp has always been a supercrop and yet it has been left behind with the advent of the industrial revolution and the introduction of foreign crops and fossil fuels, but all that may be changing.

Global Warming

As scientists and researchers look into new products to help tackle climate change, hemp, one of our oldest recorded crops, is taking centre stage. Here are a few key facts about this amazing crop

Pesticides & Pollution – Hemp can grow anywhere and needs much less pesticide control than other crops especially when compared with cotton which uses 25% of the world’s pesticides every year! Even more incredible is that hemp actually draws up toxins from the earth, almost cleaning it through a process called phytomerediation (1st-ecofriendlyplanet.com)

Erosion – due to the long roots of the hemp plant, soil suffers less erosion when a hemp crop is grown

Carbon Emissions – according to a recent report for LBJ, an acre of hemp has been recorded to remove up to 10times the amount of C02 from the atmosphere as an acre of trees.

High Yield – the same acre of hemp can produce fibres to make four times the amount of paper that the acre of trees can produce. One hectare of hemp can produce 1 tonne of fibre which in turn can create 5,400metres of hemp fabric.

Fast Growing – Hemp is one of the fastest growing crops on Earth reaching 3 metres in just 120 days, making it much more sustainable to farm than trees which can take up to 25years to reach the same height.

Low Irrigation – Hemp does not need anywhere near the amount of water demanded by thirstier crops such as cotton

Clean production – both paper and cotton industries are a huge source of pollution not least of all due to the fact that their fibres must be bleached, traditionally with chlorine. Hemp fibres do not need bleaching which makes for a much cleaner manufacturing process.

Biofuel potential – the hemp seed itself is high is oil content that is easily converted into hemp plastics and bio fuel similar to ethanol, thereby reducing our reliance on fossil fuels. It also releases much less carbon dioxide when burned and almost no sulfur dioxide compared with burning fossil fuel.

It seems that there is no end to the environmental advantages of this supercrop and the industries now using hemp in their own manufacturing grows daily, here are just a few:

Fuel

Plastics

Cosmetics

Construction

Paints

Medicines

Health and Well-being

Paper

And of course……Fabric!

Hardy Organic Hemp is suitable for curtains, blinds and domestic upholstery, comes in 13 vibrant shades and costs £79.00/m

Gecco Interiors Hemp/wool upholstery fabrics £32/m

Hemp Plus is suitable for all kinds of upholstery and curtains, comes in 31 gorgeous colours and costs £32.00/m

The applications are endless but the choice is yours!

Why do we love wool? Simples!

Monday, January 9th, 2012

campaign-for-wool-sheep

The debate regarding the best fabric for upholstery goes on and there are many factors to consider. Here are a few useful facts that may help you decide between the two main options Wool or Polyester.

The facts behind Polyester

This man-made fabric has been around since 1950’s and is made from an derivative of oil, here are some key facts

*non-renewable

*made from oil

* non-degradable

* non-absorbent

* prone to diryting

* dulls and flattens over time

* less inherent stretch

* needs toxic FR treatments

* upholstery limitations

Wool on the other hand has been around for millions of years and has many hidden qualities that our ever growing customer base love, such as

* rapidly renewable

* Grown, not man-made

* Totally bio-degradable

* Low energy footprint & Low CO2 impact

* Inherently soil hiding

* Does not attract dust & dirt

* Stretches and recovers

* Breathable

* Insulating

* Inherantly fire retardant

* Low smoke toxicity

* Low flame spread

* Self Extinguishing

Did you also know that the average wool fleece produces up to 4kg of fibre which can in turn make up to 10metres of fabric – enough to cover a large sofa or 15 work chairs.

Did you know that there is now a British Campaign for wool backed by The Prince of Wales, M&S, Harvey Nichols and Paul Smith among others.  Last year Savile Row, London was turfed over and given over to a herd of sheep to launch the Campaign.

For us the decision is clear, polyester is made from oil, oil is a precious commodity and there is no need to waste what is left on seating when we have a perfectly good alternative that actually out performs polyester and will be around long after oil reserves run out.  So, do the right thing and choose wool.

Camira Fabrics Launch new Upholstery Fabric

Thursday, January 20th, 2011

Craggan Upholstery Fabric

Gecco Interiors are thrilled to launch the latest in Camira’s sustainable uphosltery fabric range – Craggan. A rugged 97% wool fabric reminiscent of Scottish moorlands with a splash of bright accent colour that relects the brightly coloured flora found in the barren landscape. The addition of 3% viscose brings an inherent fire retardancy that prevents overuse of nasty chemicals. The fabric is 140cm wide and comes in 8 different shades costing just £33.50/m.

Interior Design Trade Mag applauds Gecco Interiors

Friday, July 2nd, 2010

IDFX magazine, a leading trade magazine for all interior designers, applauded the green principles of Gecco Interiors in the Eco News section of their July edition “Gecco Interiors has eco-friendly principles at its heart, with a recenlty launched range of fabrics that more than prove its commitment to the cause”

For more check out P.110 of the magazine hereIDFXJuly2010 - Eco News

Grand Designs’ Kevin McCloud loves Sting fabric!

Thursday, April 29th, 2010

Sting Plus nettle & wool fabric
When asked recently to list his favourite ‘Green’ products and entrepreneurs in the world of home design and interiors, Kevin McCloud of TV fame in Grand Designs and lead spokesman of sustainable architecture, listed our Sting Plus fabric as one of the best green upholstery fabrics on the market today!

According to the environmental website Treehugger, Kevin loved the idea of using stinging nettle fibres mixed with wool to create the fabric and feels that this product should be getting more exposure. We certainly agree!

Check out the wonderful story behind Sting upholstery fabric (£34.00/m), available in 8 colourways designed to reflect the colours of the British hedgerows and one of the best-sellers at Gecco Interiors.

Gecco’s Interiors Eco Guide to Fabrics – Part II

Monday, February 8th, 2010

Textile production is a huge industry and it has grown and developed in less sophisticated nations virtually unchecked for decades. This has of course lead to huge pollution damage across vast swathes of the sub-continent and restrictions have been placed on manufacturers in some areas to clean up their act.

In Tirupur, India for example, the vast amounts of salt discharged in waste water into local rivers (up to 10tonnes per day)* made the water undrinkable. The high levels of salination in the water even prevented the local farmers from using it on their land. Local government regulation has since stopped this practice and the manufacturers are forced to look at alternative methods of dyeing their fabrics with less salt.The whole world is turning blue

Some would say that this can be likened to closing the door after the proverbial horse has bolted and that manufacturers need to change their methods now, before any more damage in done.

So what of those textile producers that are looking at change? What is currently being done to improve the bad name of textile production?

Raw Materials

A selection of new natural raw materials is being brought into textile production that has increasingly relied on man-made fabrics. In fact, some of these materials were used historically but went out of fashion as mass production became key. Some new materials include: organically produced cotton and wool, linen, silk, hemp, ramie, bamboo viscose, tencel and flax.Hemp of many colours!

Increasingly, textile producers are looking towards recycling as a solution with the improvement in methods of recycling PET plastics and polyesters. Tanneries are even reclaiming the off cuts from their hides that would normally have gone to landfill and turning them into recycled leather.

Water Usage

The vast quantities of water needed to produce fabrics, continues to be the bug bear of many when looking at greening-up the industry. Different Manufacturers are using different methods to combat this issue. Some are looking into new methods of dyeing without using salt such as ‘continuous dyeing’ and ‘cold pad batch dyeing’, thus removing the need to rinse and dilute the salt effluents away.

Other companies such as O Eco textiles will only work with textile mills that have built their own water treatment site in order to tackle the problem at source. Camira Fabrics in Yorkshire have drilled their own bore hole on site which does not need to be treated to drinking water standards. In addition, the Jetvac continuous scouring machine recently installed, gives Camira a water usage reduction of 33%.

Dyeing & Finishing

Dystar is a leading dye supplier in the ‘green’ sector and has built a reputation on delivering an environmental answer to the chemical content of mass produced dyes. Even when using water based, solvent free dyes there are however, many other issues to consider such as the salt additives needed to fix the dyes to the textile fibres, or the bleaching methods used on the raw fibres prior to dyeing.

Once again, some companies are looking for their manufacturing partners to innovate and come up with cleaner processes. O Eco Textiles pledge that all of their partners try to use oxygen-based bleaching processes, soften their fabrics with Aloe Vera and bees wax and use biodegradable detergents and surfectants in their production.

Certification

The only way forward in this complex issue is to dig deeper when sourcing or buying fabrics for the green home. Certification is the one sure fire method of determining whether your fabric of choice meets your environmental code. Ask for details from the supplier about any certification that the fabric may have such as GOT’s, Oeko-Tex, Control Union or Soil Association. These labels are run to very strict codes and are possibly the only way that we can trust in the products we buy. For this reason we insist on listing the certification and/or environmental credentials of each of our fabrics at www.geccointeriors.co.uk. For clarification on the different certifications check out our Eco Info section.

Gecco’s Eco Guide to Textiles – Part I

Wednesday, January 20th, 2010

Gecco Interiors Eco Guide to Textiles – Part I

Textile production is one of the most chemically intensive and thus most polluting activities on earth. Due to the production methods involved, it remains the top industrial polluter of clean water in the world. It can take up to 500 gallons of water to produce enough fabric to cover just one sofa.

Cotton production is traditionally one of the worst offenders due to the excessive use of pesticides in growing the crop – approximately 10% of all pesticides used in the world and 25% of all insecticides are used in cotton production.*

The dyeing processes in the textile industry are also extremely harmful to the planet with many manufacturers using dyes that release aromatic amines such as benzidene and toluidine. The effluent from dye baths can contain heavy metals, ammonia, toxic solids and alkali salts.

Raw textiles are often bleached using chlorine bleach, which is known to be harmful to the environment and the end consumer.

Finally, once the textile has been produced there is the problem of fire retardancy. In Britain, we have some of the most stringent fire regulations in the World. Not a bad thing in itself, but the processes used to protect textiles from fire are highly toxic – made up of a chemical cocktail including formaldehyde, dieldrin, brominated or chlorinated compounds.

Read Part II to see what some textile manufacturers are doing to clean up their act…….

*Allen Woodburn Associates Ltd./Managing Resources Ltd “Cotton: The Crop and its Agrochemicals market” 1995