Encouraging Signs

Revised government production estimates based on updated benchmark data confirm that the U.S.
textile and apparel industries are pretty much holding their own in today’s relatively modest
economic recovery. At last report, domestic output of basic textile products like yarns and fabrics
were running 12-percent above the low point hit during the 2009 recession. That’s the equivalent of
a nearly 4-percent annual rate of increase — and not much different from the rate reported for
aggregate U.S. manufacturing activity over the same three-year period. True, the comparable 2009-12
annual rate of advance noted for more highly fabricated textile products like carpets and home
furnishings was smaller. Nevertheless, this other key mill sector managed to rack up a
close-to-1-percent annual rate of gain. Domestic apparel production over this same three-year
period showed some fractional losses, but here, too, there have been signs of leveling off over the
past 12 months or so. In any case, all of the above marks a significant change from the 10-year
period ending in 2007, the last year before the recent downturn began. During that extended earlier
period, production of basic textiles, more highly fabricated textile products and apparel tumbled
40 percent, 21 percent and 65 percent, respectively — reflecting for the most part the huge import
influx from China and other low-cost producers. But, things are beginning to change, with the shift
over the past three years clearly suggesting that U.S. mills and factories are becoming
increasingly competitive in today’s cutthroat global marketplace.


Other Positive Signs


Uncle Sam’s revised data also provide other indications of an improving industry climate.
For one, they show that the big capacity cutbacks of the past few decades are beginning to slow
down. Thus, production potential for all mills has declined only about 4 percent annually over the
past two years. That’s a fair-sized slowdown from the 5- to 6-percent attrition noted over earlier
years. Moreover, given the outlook for relatively steady demand, this upbeat trend should continue.
Also pointing to smaller capacity declines: U.S. mills still seem willing to invest hefty sums on
new facilities. The National Council of Textile Organizations finds that mills spent nearly $17
billion on new plant and equipment over the past decade. This spending is clearly paying off in
terms of impressive productivity gains. Indeed, a comparison of mill equipment and output numbers
suggests mill efficiency is rising at nearly a 3.5-percent annual rate — not that different from
the pace noted for all U.S. manufacturing. And it’s pretty much the same for the U.S. apparel
industry. Capacity shrinkage has dropped down to only a 3-percent annual rate — again, well under
the huge declines of the previous two decades, when more than two-thirds of the U.S. apparel
industry disappeared. And here, too, there’s been continuing capital investment, for both
modernization and improved efficiency.


Operating Rates Up


Finally, a few words on how the new output and capacity numbers are affecting mill and
apparel utilization rates: Here, too, the news is basically positive. More to the point: The new
government statistics show production increasing relative to available capacity. These ratios are
still nowhere near the levels at which U.S. industries would prefer to operate. Nevertheless, any
increases are welcome, as they help dampen competitive pressures. As for the actual numbers:
Domestic textile mills are currently producing at nearly 70 percent of their potential — 13-percent
above their 2009 low, though still far under the 85- to 90-percent levels prevailing through most
of the 1990s. Similar improvement is noted for the apparel sector — with a 70-percent reading
running some 10 percentage points above the 2009 low, though well under the 85-percent levels of
two decades ago. As suggested earlier, all the above has to some extent helped reduce the cutthroat
price-cutting of recent years. Indeed, it may well be why textile and apparel profits have climbed
back into modest positive territory. Moreover, factor in the likelihood of steady demand and the
absence of any cost pressures, and industry earnings could well inch up a bit more in 2013 and
2014.

May/June 2013

People

OC Oerlikon Management AG, Switzerland, has elected
Mikhail Lifshitz to the Board of Directors.

Invista, Wichita, Kan., has named
Hank Willis innovation manager, Invista Surfaces.

PeopleWillis

Willis

The
North Carolina State University (NCSU) College of Textiles, Raleigh, N.C., has
named
Barry Leonard, Welspun USA, the 2013 NCSU College of Textiles Leader of the Year.

Mount Vernon Mills Inc., Mauldin, S.C., has named
Carolyn Black FR Technical specialist.

Boulder, Colo.-based
Cocona Inc. has named
Jeff Bowman CEO.

PureCare
by Fabritech, Fairfield, N.J., has named
James A. Robb vice president and general manager.

PeopleRobb

Robb

The
Carpet America Recovery Effort (CARE), Dalton, Ga., has named
Sean Ragiel Person of the Year.

CIT Group Inc., New York City, has named
Todd Harrington Northeast regional sales manager, CIT Trade Finance.

PeopleHarrington

Harrington

Pawtucket, R.I.-based
Cooley Group has named
Steve Siener vice president and general manager, business development; and
David Lunati vice president and general manager, Cooley Engineered Membranes.



Oxford Industries Inc.
Atlanta, has appointed
Mark Maidment CEO, Ben Sherman Group.



Valdese Weavers LLC
, Valdese, N.C., has promoted
Blake Millinor to senior vice president and chief marketing officer;
Laura Levinson to senior vice president, design and merchandising;
Bob Walters to senior vice president, customer relations;
Leslie Brown to director of sales and marketing, residential brands; and
Jason Earles to director of sales and marketing, commercial residential markets.



Q-Lab Corp.
, Germany, has named
Andreas Giehl, Ph.D., European technical and standards director.

May/June 2013

The Rupp Report: Astonishing Investment Climate In The U.S.

From its beginning, the United States has played a major role within the global textile industry.
Cotton has long been a major export product from the U.S. South. Still today, cotton plays an
important role for the U.S. gross domestic product. Organizations such as Cotton Incorporated and
the National Cotton Council of America support the U.S. cotton industry up to the threshold of pain
— at least this is the opinion in other cotton growing countries. And, last, but not least, U.S.
cotton ranks among the top qualities when it comes to long-staple cotton. Pima cotton and the
Supima® brand are appreciated around the globe.

However, people, even so-called experts in the textile industry, often moan that today, it
is not possible any more to be successful in any textile market when there is such strong
competition from Asian markets in general, and the Chinese in particular. Of course, this
misconception also applies in the United States. Well, here is another story from the U.S — and it
is a successful textile industry story:

Strong Associations

Like every business sector, the U.S. textile industry is well organized. The National
Council of Textile Organizations (NCTO), based in Washington, with an office in Gastonia, N.C.,
represents the entire textile sector. The organization states it is domestically focused to ensure
a prosperous future for the U.S. textile sector, and globally positioned to work effectively with
its international allies.

According to NCTO, in 2012, the overall U.S. textile sector, ranging from fiber to apparel,
directly employed 499,000 workers — including 235,000 in textile companies alone — and indirectly
supported one million U.S. jobs.

One thing is astonishing, if one recalls the troubled economic situation in the years since
the big financial crash in 2008: NCTO says that U.S. textile companies have built 23 new plants and
invested more than US$3 billion in new plant and equipment over the last three years. These are
very impressive figures. New facilities include fiber and yarn manufacturing plants as well as
recycling plants to convert textile waste for new textile applications.

Third-largest Exporter

In 2012, U.S. textile shipments were worth more than US$53 billion. Textile product exports,
valued at more than US$17 billion in 2012, have grown by 36 percent, or more than US$4 billion,
since 2009. Net textile and apparel exports totaled US$23 billion in 2012. With these figures, it
is no wonder that the U.S. textile industry ranks third globally as an exporter of textile
products.

Two-thirds of U.S. textile exports were shipped to Western Hemisphere free trade partners
during 2012. The U.S. textile industry exported goods to more than 170 countries, including 24
countries that received goods worth more than US$100 million.

The army is in many countries of the world a strong purchasing power, and not only for
rifles and ammunition, but also for textiles. Many new developments, especially for protective
garments and high-performance fibers and fabrics, were targeted to military purposes. This is also
the case for the U.S.: NCTO says that the U.S. textile industry supplies more than 8,000 different
textile products per year to the U.S. military. In addition, the U.S. is among the global leaders
in textile research and development. New textile materials being developed by private textile
companies and universities include conductive fabric with antistatic properties, electronic
textiles that monitor heart rate and vital signs, antimicrobial fibers, antiballistic armor for
both personnel and vehicles, and temperature-regulating garments that adapt to the climate. These
are just a few examples how creative the U.S. textile industry still is.

Increased Productivity

In spite of all the troubles of the textile industry in the West, the U.S. textile industry
can present some astonishing facts and figures over the last 10 years: According to statistics
provided by NCTO, U.S. textile industry productivity has increased by 45 percent over the last
decade, and the industry is among the top three in productivity increases. And to dispel another
fairy tale about wages in textiles: In 2012, earnings for textile workers averaged 135 percent more
than apparel store workers, and they also received health care and pension benefits.

A troublesome economic situation is one thing. There are two ways to get out of it: either
accept it or fight against it. Imagination and experience have always been a splendid munition for
success. In textiles, they have brought an astonishing investment climate into the U.S.

May 14, 2013

TEXbase Launches RSL Guardian(SM) Restricted Substance Management Solution

Bozeman, Mont.-based TEXbase — a provider of Web-based compliance, quality and materials management
software solutions — has launched RSL Guardian(SM) to help apparel and footwear brands and consumer
product suppliers manage restricted substance lists (RSLs) across the supply chain.

RSL Guardian is offered as a standalone solution or as an integrated part of the TEXbase
solution that enables brands and consumer product companies to manage compliance, quality and
materials from raw materials to end product. The service’s dynamic RSL libraries include industry
association and state lists. Users may share libraries, develop standards and test products across
the supply chain. The TEXbase real-time collaboration network enables users to work together to
manage and test products according to standards and compliance provisions.

System features include: automated update and management capabilities; electronic signature
capability and documentation; and dashboards that enable status reviews of compliant items and
products.

May 14, 2013

Texnology Debuts Ellittica Needle Loom

Italy-based Texnology — a manufacturer of needle looms, web drafters, profiling systems, turnkey
lines and cross lapper systems — reports its newly developed and patented Ellittica needle loom can
operate as a vertical or elliptical loom and is steplessly adjustable.

Ellittica features connecting rods that join and merge in one gear shaft connected to a
single motor, enabling both vertical and horizontal needle board movement, thereby ensuring that
the needles tilt in the direction of the material being processed and virtually eliminating the
need to draft the web as it is pulled through the loom. The machine can process nonwovens as light
as 35 grams per square meter in addition to heavier high-loft nonwovens.

Other features include: 4-D shaft balancing; honeycomb structure with filling technology;
new-generation energy-efficient transmissions; low operating temperature; automatic needle plate
locking; assisted needle plate removal system; digitally adjustable bed plate and needle beam that
is made from a special allow; pneumatic cylinders to automatically open side doors and panels;
automatic lubrication system; a PLC Texnology programmable logic controller program to ensure the
needle pattern is optimized; Semina program to create the optimized needle pattern; and Settimo
Senso (seventh sense) to implement Semina during operation.

Customers may conduct trials using their own materials at Texnology’s technology center near
Venice, Italy.

The company’s U.S. representative is Zimmer America Corp., Spartanburg.

May 14, 2013

Heytex-Group Introduces HEYblue® Digitex® Eclipse

Heytex-Group — a Germany-based manufacturer of technical, coated and laminated textiles — has
introduced HEYblue® digitex® eclipse, a foam-coated, reflection-free indoor textile blockout for
large-format printing applications including wall hangings, bonded wall textiles, wallpaper,
suspension systems and advertising mediums in display systems.

HEYblue digitex eclipse is designed for unilateral printing with ultraviolet and latex inks,
and is the first foam-coated blockout to be offered in widths of up to 5 meters, the company
reports. The fabric features a matte and opaque surface structure and translucence below 2 percent;
and offers good color detail and reproduction and good edge sharpness owing to its combination of
foam coating on the front and black coating on the back.

In addition, HEYblue digitex eclipse is polyvinyl chloride (PVC)-free, 100-percent recyclable
and flame-retardant in accordance with B1 standards.

May 14, 2013

Messe Frankfurt, Proposte Announce Partnership

International exhibition organizer Messe Frankfurt GmbH, Frankfurt am Main, and Proposte S.r.l.,
Italy — organizer of the annual Proposte exhibition for European manufacturers of furnishing
fabrics and curtains — have partnered in an effort to draw leading European manufacturers to
exhibit at Intertextile Shanghai Home Textiles, the China International Trade Fair for Home
Textiles and Accessories organized by Messe Frankfurt and held biannually at the Shanghai New
International Expo Center.

The upcoming Intertextile Shanghai Home Textiles – Autumn edition, which will take place Aug.
27-29, 2013, will feature a Proposte China Pavilion at which approximately 25 European decorative
and furniture fabrics manufacturers will exhibit.

“There is a growing demand for high-grade products in the Asian market,” said Detlef Braun,
member of the Executive Board, Messe Frankfurt. “With the Proposte, we will further expand this
segment at our fair in Shanghai and thus make it even more attractive for local buyers. We are
convinced that all concerned will profit from this partnership and look forward to working with our
Italian colleagues.”

“The time has come for Proposte to open its doors in other countries, while still staying
true to its image, high-end content and selective approach,” said Mauro Cavelli, president,
Proposte. “Having scrutinized the various opportunities, in cooperation with Messe Frankfurt we
decided on China, a huge country that has seen its economy and customs evolve at an unrivalled
rate.”

May 14, 2013

Mattex To Establish Headquarters And Manufacturing In Eton, Ga., Add 200 Jobs

Mattex — a Saudi Arabia-owned, Dubai-based producer of carpet backings, artificial grass backings,
and woven and nonwoven geotextiles — will invest $60 million to establish a U.S. headquarters and
manufacturing operation in Eton, Ga., and create 200 jobs.

The company will build a 275,000- to 375,000-square-foot extrusion manufacturing plant that
will produce primary and secondary polyolefin-based carpet backings. Equipment to be installed will
include tape extrusion, beaming and weaving equipment. Mattex plans to begin construction on the
facility this summer and commence operations in 2014.

Founded in 1995, Mattex operates four state-of-the-art production facilities in Saudi Arabia
and Dubai as well as warehouse/distribution offices in Belgium, Australia, New Zealand, South
Africa, China and the United States. The company opened its U.S. distribution center, Mattex USA,
in Calhoun, Ga., in 2007; and decided to establish a U.S. headquarters and manufacturing plant to
be closer to the North American market.

“This plant is a first step,” said Barclay Payne, general manager, Mattex USA. “We can truly
say Mattex Group is coming to America! This milestone would never have happened without the support
of our North American customer base. We are truly thankful for their support.”

“Our mission to be the ‘preferred global partner of choice’ led us to build a
state-of-the-art carpet-backing facility in North Georgia as the next logical step for better
servicing our current customer base,” said Luc Blommaert, CEO, Mattex Group. “The period we’ve been
operating out of our existing distribution center can be referred to as our engagement period. Now
it’s time to get married, so we are building a plant. This is the Group’s fifth expansion. The
choice of North Georgia was easy: The available business assets spoke for themselves, and after
careful consideration we decided to build and grow in and with Murray County.”

May 14, 2013

Outlast® Technology Featured In MyKool™ Base Layers

Boulder, Colo.-based Outlast Technologies LLC, developer of Outlast® temperature-regulating
technology and phase-change materials (PCMs), reports that MyKool Inc. — a Bedford, Pa.-based
tactical and performance sports apparel company — has selected Outlast technology for use in its
PCM Base Layer apparel collection.

The MyKool™ Outlast collection features Outlast’s proactive temperature regulation and
moisture-management performance combined with antimicrobial properties; a raglan design with flat,
double-stitched seams; and a longer bodice to help eliminate seam stacking and keep shirts from
coming untucked or rolling up. The base layers are designed for athletes as well as for law
enforcement, military and emergency services personnel to wear under their uniforms.

“Our research respondents within different industries said they wanted clothing that moved
with them and didn’t bunch, had longer cuffs and tails, actively managed moisture, moderated
temperature swings, retained its shape and performance after washing and met industry standards for
safety and fire protection,” said Michael Swartzwelder, president, MyKool. “Through our partnership
with Outlast, our base layers are able to meet this demand with a state-of-the-art innovation that
provides practical comfort by managing the build-up of heat before you begin sweating.”

MyKool Outlast base layers provide a 34-percent reduction in perspiration and can reduce
sweat by 10 grams, the companies report.

May 14, 2013

Precision Fabrics Group Chooses OEKO-TEX® Certification For Therapeutic And Protective Fabric Collections

GREENSBORO, N.C. — May 7, 2013 — Precision Fabrics Group (PFG), maker of value-added, woven and
non-woven technical textiles for performance applications, has selected OEKO-TEX® Standard 100, a
comprehensive textile product safety certification program that ensures textiles are tested for
chemical substances which are believed to be harmful to human health. OEKO-TEX tests for more than
300 concerning substances such as heavy metals, carcinogenic dye stuffs, pesticides, and
formaldehyde. The certification is independent and voluntary and is a component of PFG’s
comprehensive commitment to quality, product safety, and responsible manufacturing.

 

“OEKO-TEX® certification give our customers added assurance that the fabrics we provide are
tested for harmful chemicals and made to the high standards they expect from PFG,” says Dr. Terry
Montgomery, Vice President of PFG’s Woven Division. “We selected OEKO-TEX® certification for its
up-to-date catalog of concerning substances, its rigorous testing procedures, and its global
recognition.”

 

PFG renewed certification on three of its woven fabric lines. DermaTherapy® fabrics are used
in therapeutic bedding for people who suffer from atopic dermatitis, eczema, psoriasis and night
sweats. The fabrics are smooth and wick moisture to provide a skin-friendly surface for sensitive
consumers. Pristine® fabrics are made into anti-dust mite bedding encasements for consumers
suffering from asthma and allergies. Unlike some other barrier fabrics, Pristine fabrics are soft,
breathable, and durable. PFG also secured certification for its Integrity® fabrics which are used
in industrial and pharmaceutical clean room protective apparel. This engineered fabric line
provides contaminant protection and features other value-added benefits such as antimicrobial and
ESD properties.

 

“These fabric collections are used in applications where harmful substances could compromise
product performance and consumer satisfaction,” continues Montgomery. “With OEKO-TEX®
certification, we know — and our customers know — that these fabrics are safe for the people who
ultimately use them.” 

 

Another benefit of OEKO-TEX® certification is the modular nature of the testing process.
When PFG’s customers want to secure OEKO-TEX® certification for their final products, they get
credit for using PFG’s certified fabrics, resulting in an easier and less costly certification
procedure. PFG and other certified manufacturers are listed in Oeko-Tex’s online Buyer’s Guide.

Posted May 14, 2013

Source: Oeko-Tex

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