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and Textiles","Producing textile and leather products and processing them into apparel and accessories","goods_and_services",{"article_id":23,"industry_id":155,"created_at":141,"updated_at":6,"industry":156},"wood_and_paper",{"id":155,"name":157,"description":158,"sector":159},"Wood and Paper","Extracting and gathering wood through forestry and producing wood and paper products","materials_and_fuels",{"id":161,"score":115,"body":162,"status":174,"article_id":23,"created_at":125,"updated_at":133,"published_at":125},"rw5l",{"title":163,"outcome":164,"problem":165,"summary":166,"solution":167,"attachment":168},"wijld: Wood fiber clothing","\u003Cp>Water, energy consumption and Co2 emissions are reduced in wood fiber production from sustainable forests compared to cotton production.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>Which makes it a great sustainable material especially for today's clothing industry.\u003C/p>","\u003Cp>Today, the clothing industry mainly stands for fast fashion.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>The appreciation of clothing fell rapidly. Clothing that is very labour and resource intensive is now almost worthless from the buyer's perspective and often disposed of after being worn only a few times.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>\u003Cbr>\u003C/p>\u003Cp>A closer look at the clothing industry of recent years reveals that two raw materials form the basis of today's textile production: polyester and cotton.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>More than 60% of all fibers used worldwide for clothing are made from synthetics such as petroleum-based raw materials.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>25 % of fibers are made of cotton.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>About 1 % organic cotton constituting.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>The remaining 15% of fibers consist of wool, cellulose-based fibers and other natural fibers such as hemp or linen.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>\u003Cbr>\u003C/p>\u003Cp>The tremendous increase in the consumption of clothing is also increasing the demand for inexpensive raw materials. As a result, the production of synthetic, and thus petroleum-based fibers, has increased as has the use of pesticides and fertilizers in cotton.\u003C/p>","\u003Cp>wijld is a team works for fair and environmentally friendly clothing made of wood. The wood they use comes from certified sustainable forestry, which makes it Water, energy consumption and Co2 emissions are reduced in wood fiber production from sustainable forests compared to cotton production.\u003C/p>","\u003Cp>Clothing should bring more value once again, with regards to every single step in the production process and the selection of the material to be processed.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>forests serve as habitats for a wide variety of animal and plant species. Trees are of course also very important for climate protection. They serve as CO² stores. It is assumed that trees store 49% of global CO². By converting trees into wood products, the CO² they contain remains stored, since it is only released during the biological decomposition of the wood. Thus all wood products contribute to the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>Wijld&nbsp;started to work on wood fiber production, The wood they use comes from certified sustainable forestry, from Austria, Germany and the Czech Republic. As more is always planted than harvested.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>In forestry no additional fertilisers need to be used to produce the wood fiber, while different fertilisers and pesticides are used to grow cotton.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>The high water consumption caused by artificial irrigation of cotton plantations in areas with low rainfall while Trees in forests do not need the artificial water supply and can store water longer and in larger quantities than a comparable open spaces.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>Raw material wood lies in the size of landed needed for cultivation. For the same amount of fibers, the area required for cotton is on average 300 to 500 % larger than for their wood fibers.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>\u003Cbr>\u003C/p>\u003Cp>To make the wood fibers:\u003C/p>\u003Cp>They extract the cellulose from the raw material wood. Then they dissolved it in organic, environmentally friendly “N-methylmorpholine N-oxides (NMMO)” by dehydration without chemical modification.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>Pulp is then filtered and pressed through spinning glands. The resulting fibers are then precipitated into a bath with aqueous NMMO solution and then combined as a fiber strand.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>The solvent can be recycled again and again as it can be easily removed from the fiber due to its excellent water mixing properties.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>\u003Cbr>\u003C/p>\u003Cp>The fabric can absorb moisture optimally and quickly release it again, which leads to a temperature-balancing and antibacterial effect. Which supports the body's own cooling effect.\u003C/p>",[169,172],{"name":170,"type":171,"value":170},"https://www.wijld.com/en/","link",{"name":173,"type":171,"value":173},"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC1dFRNeRrhZwjrNKz7Q5HYg","published",false,{"id":17,"type":177,"cta":6,"cta_link":6,"created_at":178,"updated_at":179,"owner_id":4,"owner_relationship":127,"views":180,"owner":181,"image":182,"contributors":186,"article_locations":190,"article_industries":198,"view_count":180,"like_count":115,"collection_count":119,"content":201,"can_edit":175},"policy_case","2022-09-14T12:35:05.078Z","2026-05-29T08:37:56.433Z",9,{"id":4,"type":5,"owner_id":4,"about":6,"job_title":6,"url":6,"linkedin":6,"email":6,"staff_of_id":6,"organisation_id":6,"organisation":6},{"id":183,"link":184,"alt":6,"source":6,"created_at":178,"updated_at":185,"article_id":17,"image_profile_id":6,"banner_profile_id":6},"kCmnTfO3Rps=","https://kh-assets.prod.circularity-gap.world/main-image/1778153972028-4N3OEoAb.jpeg","2022-09-28T19:32:35.822Z",[187,189],{"contributor_id":188},"6dGN-g",{"contributor_id":4},[191],{"article_id":17,"location_id":192,"created_at":13,"updated_at":6,"location":193},"2643743",{"id":192,"type":194,"name":195,"color":6,"parent_location_id":196,"created_at":197,"updated_at":6},"city","London","GBR","2026-02-27T07:55:14.722Z",[199],{"article_id":17,"industry_id":149,"created_at":13,"updated_at":6,"industry":200},{"id":149,"name":151,"description":152,"sector":153},{"id":202,"score":115,"body":203,"status":174,"article_id":17,"created_at":178,"updated_at":185,"published_at":178},"Mm7R",{"title":204,"problem":205,"summary":206,"solution":207,"attachment":208},"Project Coelicolor by Faber Futures:\nDying textiles with Streptomyces coelicolor pigment","\u003Cp>Fossil fuel-based activities are reshaping the earth in a way that is capable of dramatically change the climate, accelerating a loss of biodiversity.That means we need to find new materials systems that are not petroleum-based.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>In the textile industry, most of the ecological harm occurs at the finishing and the dyeing stage. One example is the use of huge amounts of water.\u003C/p>","\u003Cp>While the textile industry is one of the most polluting in the world, most of the ecological harm caused by textile processing occurs at the finishing and the dyeing stage.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>Coelicolor is an organism, a power house for synthesizing organic chemical compounds. It produces an antibiotic called actinorhodin, which ranges in color from blue to pink and purple, depending on the acidity of its environment.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>Project Coelicolor by Faber Futures is based in this simple question:\u003C/p>\u003Cp>If a bacteria produces a pigment, how can we use it to dye textiles?\u003C/p>\u003Cp>The project achievement answer is the growth of the organism Streptomyces coelicolor directly onto silk, where each colony produces pigment around its own territory.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>This process generates very little runoff, and produces a colorfast pigment without the use of any chemicals while can also generate an organic pattern, a uniform dye or a graphic print.\u003C/p>","\u003Cp>Faber Futures brings critical design thinking to life science technologies like synthetic biology, exploring and enabling compelling and preferable biodesign futures.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>One of its research projects is Project Coelicolor based on this simple question:\u003C/p>\u003Cp>If a bacteria produces a pigment, how do we work with it to dye textiles?\u003C/p>\u003Cp>The answer the project found is on the growth of the organism Streptomyces coelicolor directly onto silk, where each colony produces pigment around its own territory. How that works?\u003C/p>\u003Cp>\u003Cbr>\u003C/p>\u003Cp>When adding cells into the fabric, they generate enough dyestuff to saturate the entire cloth.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>One magical thing about dying textiles in this way, through direct fermentation when you add the bacteria directly onto the silk, is that to dye one t-shirt, the bacteria survive on just 200 milliliters of water.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>So the process generates very little runoff, and produces a colorfast pigment without the use of any chemicals.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>After they’ve established the baseline for cultivating Streptomyces, so that it consistently produces enough pigment, they turn to twisting, folding, clamping, dipping, spraying and submerging.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>Which begin to inform the aesthetics of coelicolor’s activity.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>And using them in a systematic way enables the generation of an organic pattern, a uniform dye or a graphic print.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>\u003Cbr>\u003C/p>\u003Cp>To scale these artisanal methods of making so it can be used in industry, the project used a bio reactor. This reactor contains a type of microorganism brewery containing yeasts that have been engineered to produce specific commodity chemicals and compounds. Those yeasts are connected to a suite of automated hardware and software that read in real time and gives feedback to a design team the growth conditions of the microbe.\u003C/p>",[209,211,213],{"name":210,"type":171,"value":210},"https://www.natsaiaudrey.co.uk/",{"name":212,"type":171,"value":212},"https://faberfutures.com/projects/project-coelicolor/",{"name":214,"type":171,"value":214},"https://www.ted.com/talks/natsai_audrey_chieza_fashion_has_a_pollution_problem_can_biology_fix_it",{"id":21,"type":124,"cta":6,"cta_link":6,"created_at":216,"updated_at":217,"owner_id":4,"owner_relationship":127,"views":218,"owner":219,"image":220,"contributors":224,"article_locations":228,"article_industries":233,"view_count":218,"like_count":115,"collection_count":119,"content":236,"can_edit":175},"2022-09-24T10:40:32.554Z","2026-05-28T09:52:26.796Z",12,{"id":4,"type":5,"owner_id":4,"about":6,"job_title":6,"url":6,"linkedin":6,"email":6,"staff_of_id":6,"organisation_id":6,"organisation":6},{"id":221,"link":222,"alt":6,"source":6,"created_at":216,"updated_at":223,"article_id":21,"image_profile_id":6,"banner_profile_id":6},"MFlGqjUiKcU=","https://kh-assets.prod.circularity-gap.world/main-image/1778153985497-CX-ZiJWF.jpeg","2022-09-26T04:41:25.812Z",[225,226],{"contributor_id":4},{"contributor_id":227},"KPy0Tw",[229],{"article_id":21,"location_id":230,"created_at":13,"updated_at":6,"location":231},"NLD",{"id":230,"type":143,"name":232,"color":6,"parent_location_id":145,"created_at":197,"updated_at":6},"The Netherlands",[234],{"article_id":21,"industry_id":149,"created_at":13,"updated_at":6,"industry":235},{"id":149,"name":151,"description":152,"sector":153},{"id":237,"score":115,"body":238,"status":174,"article_id":21,"created_at":216,"updated_at":223,"published_at":216},"QRLS",{"title":239,"problem":240,"summary":241,"solution":242,"attachment":243},"ReBlend develops textiles and textile products from post-consumer textile waste","\u003Cp>Creating possibilities to keep post-consumer blended cotton waste in the loop and not go to incineration.\u003C/p>","\u003Cp>ReBlend is a company that develops textiles and textile products from post-consumer textiles that otherwise would end up in incineration.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>\u003Cbr>\u003C/p>\u003Cp>In collaboration with waste collectors, producers, designers, makers, and visionaries, ReBlend organises a full supply chain to accelerate a new ecosystem for circular textiles, offering services ranging from the development of innovative textiles, circular clothing, and accessories, to cooperation in the co-creation processes and consultancy support in order to accelerate the transition to circular textiles.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>\u003Cbr>\u003C/p>\u003Cp>ReBlend fabrics, made in partnership with Recover, Raymakers, Enschede Textielstad, and Italdenim.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>It is also collaborating with the Tropenmuseum in Amsterdam, the Afrikamuseum in Berg en Dal, and the Museum Volkenkunde in Leiden (NL) to produce colourful shawls made of 70% textile waste and 30% recycled PET.\u003C/p>","\u003Cp>In close cooperation with Recover, ReBlend made a yarn containing 70% old unwearable garments that otherwise would have gone to incineration.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>\u003Cbr>\u003C/p>\u003Cp>This yarn is a combination of the ReBlend focus to create possibilities to keep post-consumer blended cotton waste in the loop and the knowledge &amp; expertise of the Recover upcycled textile system to recycle pre-consumer cutting waste.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>\u003Cbr>\u003C/p>\u003Cp>Process of making:\u003C/p>\u003Cp>-All post-consumer textiles are collected and sorted by rewearables and recyclables, by composition and by color.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>-Then the textiles are stripped from non-recyclable pieces such as zippers and buttons. The waste materials from this process are processed according to environmental regulation.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>-The cleaned textiles are then cut and pulled into strings of fiber.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>-The yarn is spun by the Spanish Firm Recover.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>These fibers are mixed in a huge room with recycled PET from bottles and are carded, spun, and twisted into 20/2 Nm yarn for the production of new textiles.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>-By mixing the post-consumer textiles sorted by color, 80% of the dyeing process that would be necessary otherwise with virgin raw materials can be avoided.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>-Finally, the yarns are transported to weavers and knitters to produce different types of textile products.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>\u003Cbr>\u003C/p>\u003Cp>\u003Cbr>\u003C/p>\u003Cp>A detailed description of the yarn composition:\u003C/p>\u003Cp>Anthracite grey: 70% from sorted multi-color garments + 30% black rPET.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>Lavender blue: 50% sorted jeans, 20% sorted white garments + 30% colored rPET.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>Ivory white: 70% white sorted garment + 10% colorless rPET + 20% colored rPET.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>Oro/gold: 40% sorted white garments + 30% yellow/orange cutting waste + 30% colored rPET.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>(Coloring of rPET is with a minimal amount of Oeko-tex certified coloring)\u003C/p>",[244,246,248],{"name":245,"type":171,"value":245},"https://www.reblend.nl/how-recycling-textile-waste-works/",{"name":247,"type":171,"value":247},"https://www.reblend.nl/",{"name":249,"type":171,"value":249},"https://www.reblend.nl/material-information/",{"id":19,"type":124,"cta":6,"cta_link":6,"created_at":251,"updated_at":252,"owner_id":4,"owner_relationship":127,"views":253,"owner":254,"image":255,"contributors":259,"article_locations":261,"article_industries":267,"view_count":253,"like_count":115,"collection_count":119,"content":270,"can_edit":175},"2022-09-24T01:05:11.649Z","2026-05-29T03:43:39.823Z",17,{"id":4,"type":5,"owner_id":4,"about":6,"job_title":6,"url":6,"linkedin":6,"email":6,"staff_of_id":6,"organisation_id":6,"organisation":6},{"id":256,"link":257,"alt":6,"source":6,"created_at":251,"updated_at":258,"article_id":19,"image_profile_id":6,"banner_profile_id":6},"iuWzwHVzBoQ=","https://kh-assets.prod.circularity-gap.world/main-image/1778153984889-t_0p4bfa.jpeg","2022-09-24T02:23:09.595Z",[260],{"contributor_id":4},[262],{"article_id":19,"location_id":263,"created_at":13,"updated_at":6,"location":264},"2657970",{"id":263,"type":194,"name":265,"color":6,"parent_location_id":266,"created_at":197,"updated_at":6},"Winterthur","CHE",[268],{"article_id":19,"industry_id":149,"created_at":13,"updated_at":6,"industry":269},{"id":149,"name":151,"description":152,"sector":153},{"id":271,"score":115,"body":272,"status":174,"article_id":19,"created_at":251,"updated_at":258,"published_at":251},"tCKw",{"title":273,"outcome":274,"problem":275,"summary":276,"solution":277,"attachment":278},"Recycling Spinning System","\u003Cp>Rieter recycling system make many different applications, from socks to sweaters. Chinos and workwear out of recycled materials.&nbsp;\u003C/p>\u003Cp>&nbsp;\u003C/p>\u003Cp>An example of the Recycling journey from a second hand T-shirt\u003C/p>\u003Cp>into a chino pant:\u003C/p>\u003Cp>A second-hand T-shirt\u003C/p>\u003Cp>has its material torn to tear fibers\u003C/p>\u003Cp>and recycled into high-quality yarns\u003C/p>\u003Cp>to produce a chino pant\u003C/p>","\u003Cp>Climate change and environmental degradation are some of the main issues facing us today.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>With barely 1% of garments being recycled and three quarters of the world’s clothing ending up in landfill.\u003C/p>","\u003Cp>Rieter is a supplier of systems for short-staple fiber spinning.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>The company develops and manufactures machinery, systems and components used to convert natural and man made fibers and their blends into yarn.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>Their technology knows how to enables pre- and post-consumer goods to be recycled in similar applications as yarn production, Using rotor or ring recycling system.\u003C/p>","\u003Cp>One of the goals within the textile industry is to “close the loop,” which refers to recycling and reusing products without material loss, using less raw material and diverting waste away from landfill.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>Rieter uses its technology to offer a recycling spinning system\u003C/p>\u003Cp>for ring and rotor spinning lines that enables to spin fibers from used\u003C/p>\u003Cp>garments and waste into yarns.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>&nbsp;\u003C/p>\u003Cp>Fiber length is an important parameters after the tearing\u003C/p>\u003Cp>process, as it determine which spinning process (ring or rotor) should be used.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>&nbsp;\u003C/p>\u003Cp>A rotor spinning line recycling system makes it possible, for\u003C/p>\u003Cp>example, to spin yarn up to Ne 20 with a blend of 75% post-consumer material\u003C/p>\u003Cp>and 25% virgin cotton, or yarn up to Ne 30 with a blend of 87,5% pre-consumer\u003C/p>\u003Cp>material and polyester.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>&nbsp;\u003C/p>\u003Cp>However, a ring recycling system makes it possible, for example,\u003C/p>\u003Cp>to spin ring yarn up to Ne 20 with a blend of 60% post-consumer material and\u003C/p>\u003Cp>40% virgin cotton, or yarn up to Ne 30 with a blend of 60% pre-consumer\u003C/p>\u003Cp>material and 40% polyester.\u003C/p>",[279,281],{"name":280,"type":171,"value":280},"https://www.rieter.com/cz/",{"name":282,"type":171,"value":282},"https://www.rieter.com/cz/products/system-applications/recycling-spinning-system",[]]