Texworld USA Winter Edition Features Largest Number Of Exhibitors To Date: 13-Percent Increase In Exhibitors Enhances Texworld USA’s Global Offering

ATLANTA — February 14, 2014 — The sixteenth edition of Texworld USA showcased 268 exhibitors from 18 countries representing an 13% increase over January 2013. The winter edition featured 4 international pavilions including Turkey, Taiwan, Egypt and Pakistan covering 12 product categories to offer buyers an extensive array of fabrics, textile acessories and sourcing options. A total of 2,815 verified attendees visited the three day event. Visitors came from 43 countries including, but not limited to: United States, Canada, Mexico and India.

“Leading fashion buyers from Macy’s, Ralph Lauren Denim & Supply and Armani Exchange, to name a few, attended the sixteenth edition of Texworld USA despite the snowy weather conditions, proving that Texworld USA remains the premier apparel fabric sourcing destination in North America,” remarked Kristy Meade, Group Show Director, Messe Frankfurt, Inc. She went further to add, “We appreciate the support of our Advisory Council that provides on-going guidance led by Tricia Carey, Lenzing Innovation, as we continue to add new and exciting features to the show to attract new exhibitors and buyers.”

In collaboration with CCPIT-TEX, the fifth edition of the International Apparel Sourcing Show was once again co-located with Texworld USA and featured 63 exhibitors from 7 countries. Returning exhibitors from China, Bangladesh, Egypt and India completed the overall supply chain by offering contract manufacturing, original design manufacturing and private label development.


Texworld USA’s show partner, Lenzing Innovation, had a major presence on the show floor which featured exhibitors from countries such as China, Korea and India to name a few, helping provide attendees with a global reach to source goods and services.

Texworld USA exhibitor, John Malone, Textile Agent, Cooper Watkinson Textiles, Ltd. commented, “We have had a nice steady flow of foot traffic, meeting with our existing clients as well as establishing new contacts. We are pleased with the overall show and quality of the new contacts we are making.”

Trend Forum provides insight to Spring/Summer 2015
Texworld Paris Art Directors, Louis Gerin and Gregory Lamaud created a thought provoking, interesting and relevant Trend Forum highlighting the Spring/Summer 2015 trends and color direction. Attendees enjoyed daily guided tours provided by Louis and Gregory as well as being provided with a copy of the Spring/Summer 2015 Trend Book. The Texworld Trend Forum featured a juried collection of fabric swatches provided by exhibitors that could be sourced at the show.

Complimentary seminar series remains popular with attendees
Texworld USA’s show partner, Lenzing Innovation, delivered 12 complimentary seminars to 570 attendees, of which 350 were unique participants, over the 3 day show period. A few of the popular topics included: Navigating Texworld USA, Global Sourcing, Stylesight’s Trend Presentation and Denim Innovation.

Mercedes Gonzales, Director, Global Purchasing Companies, opened the seminar series with “Navigating Texworld USA.” This seminar for new Texworld USA attendees covered topics such as: show floor layout, Trend Forum, Manufacture NY overview, determining target markets, understanding the seasonal calendar and questions to ask exhibitors.

The seminar sessions provided a range of useful information for beginners to seasoned textile professionals. Tricia Carey, Senior Merchandising Manager, Lenzing Innovation, commented, “Despite the inclement weather, we had an excellent seminar series on trends, sourcing, fabric innovation and emerging business development. The high level of interaction between attendees and presenters stimulated ideas and creativity. It is a wonderful opportunity to bring the market together.”

Texworld USA is the largest sourcing event in North America for apparel fabric buyers, research and development specialists, designers, merchandisers and overseas sourcing professionals. The seventeenth edition of Texworld USA will take place July 22-24, 2014 at the Javits Convention Center in New York City. The summer edition of Texworld USA will be co-located with the sixth edition of the International Apparel Sourcing Show and the fifth edition of the Home Textiles Sourcing Expo.

Posted February 18, 2014

Source: Texworld/Messe Frankfurt

JEC Group Announces The 2014 Winners Of The JEC Innovation Awards

PARIS — February 17, 2014 — This year, 15 companies and their partners will receive an award at JEC Europe – Composites Show and Conferences, to be held March 11-13, 2014, for their composites innovations. In 2014, the winners broach a wide expanse of domains from raw materials to design and processes and, of course, applications. They were selected from the following categories:

  • DESIGN : Hutchinson (France) : Composite Semi structural Cockpit Module for ATA 25
  • SIMULATION : University of Twente (Netherlands) : Braiding simulation and optimization
  • PROCESS : Fraunhofer IPT (Germany) : New multifunctional placement-head for processing of dry fibers and tapes with thermoplastic or thermoset matrix
  • AERONAUTICS : University of Applied Sciences Rapperswil, Institute for Material Science and Plastics Processing (Switzerland) : Development of a composite annulus filler for Rolls-Royce jet engines
  • AIRCRAFT INTERIORS : Expliseat (France) : The Titanium Seat
  • CONSUMER GOODS : Owens Corning (France) : New reinforced thermoplastic composite for washing machine tubs
  • CONSUMER ELECTRONICS : Motorola Mobility (USA) : All-Thermoplastic composite back smartphone covers
  • MEDICAL : Groupe Médical Gaumond (Canada) : Transportable hyperbaric chamber
  • PRESSURE VESSELS : Maruhachi Co., LTD. (Japon) : Ultra-durable CFRP high-pressure hydrogen fuel storage tank
  • AUTOMOTIVE : Porsche Germany) : 918 Spyder: Innovative material and manufacturing approach for a multi-part aerodynamic underbody
  • OIL & GAS : Advanced Composite Structures Australia Pty Ltd. (Australia), Petronas  (Malaysia) : Novel Composite Clamps for Pipeline Repairs
  • WIND ENERGY : Saertex GmbH & Co. KG (Germany) : New production process : « Mapretec technique »
  • SUSTAINABILITY : DSM Composite Resins AG (Switzerland) : New composite system for wind turbine blades
  • RAILWAYS : ApATeCh-Applied Advanced Technology Company LTD (Russia) : Composite hopper car body produced by vacuum infusion
  • MARINE : North Thin Ply Technology (Switzerland) : World’s Thinnest UD-Prepreg and associated handling and design tools

Posted February 18, 2014

Source: JEC Group
 

Suominen Launches Value-Adding Novolino Nonwoven For Tabletop Products

HELSINKI, Finland — February 17, 2014 — Suominen, a global supplier of nonwovens and flexible packaging, has launched a new range of nonwoven materials for use in tabletop applications in the hotel, restaurant and catering (HoReCa) markets globally.

The Novolino nonwoven range of substrates, featuring a number of unique attributes, has already seen commercial success in both Europe and the Americas. The launch is in line with Suominen’s stated strategic objective of increasing the share of value added products in its portfolio. Novolino nonwoven products in tabletop usage represents Suominen’s expansion of its nonwoven business beyond wipes, where Suominen is the global leader.

Speaking of the product launch, Eileen Calder, Product Manager for Travel and Catering, said “Novolino nonwovens bring a new dimension to the tabletop market whilst adding value beyond the traditional offerings in this segment. With its soft and silky touch, Novolino nonwovens offer users a disposable alternative to traditional linen or other textile napkins, table covers or guest towels.”

Posted February 18, 2014

Source: Suominen

Huntsman Textile Effects Launches New TERASIL® Inks to Allow Truly High-Speed Sublimation Transfer-Paper Printing

SINGAPORE  — February 6, 2014 — In a first for the global textile industry, Huntsman Textile Effects is enabling true industrial-speed dye sublimation transfer-paper printing with the launch of its new TERASIL® Subli XKS inks.

Designed specifically for the Kyocera high-speed printing head, the TERASIL® Subli XKS inks use a simple waterless application system that ensures excellent runnability and consistency at speeds up to 30 meters / min, with excellent color depth.

These new Kyocera-approved inks allow dyehouses to adopt industrial-scale sublimation printing as an alternative to direct printing, which is both time consuming and water intensive, requiring as much as 60 to 80 liters of water to produce 1 kg of high quality printed polyester goods. The new inks thus make it possible for textile producers to improve their competitiveness and environmental performance while also capturing a share of the growing global market for high-quality dyed polyester products across diverse sectors, including apparel, sportswear, signage and flags.

“Developed by Huntsman Textile Effects in close cooperation with leading printhead and digital equipment manufacturers such as Kyocera and MS, the new TERASIL® Subli XKS inks deliver excellent results through a simplified application process that entirely eliminates the need for water during printing,” said Kevin Myers, Global Marketing Manager for Inkjets. “We expect these new inks to significantly boost customers’ digital printing capabilities and to help drive sustainability across the textiles sector.”

Posted February 18, 2014

Source: Huntsman Textile Effects

Bulletin Board

The Office of the United States Trade Representative, Washington, has published the Special 301 Out-of-Cycle Review of Notorious Markets for 2013. The annual review identifies online and physical marketplaces engaging in commercial-scale intellectual property rights infringement.
 
The International Oeko-Tex Association, Switzerland, has named Weba Weberei Appenzell AG, Switzerland, Company of the Month for January 2014.
 
The Retail Industry Leaders Association (RILA), Arlington, Va., has released its 2014 Public Policy Agenda: “Retailers Strengthening Communities.” The agenda may be viewed at rila.org/2014Agenda/Documents/2014agenda.htm.
 
The United States Fashion Industry Association (USFIA), Washington, has named New York City-based KPMG LLP its Premier Partner for 2014.
 
Color Solutions International, Charlotte, a division of Singapore-based DyStar Group, has named Cobalt Blue the 2013 Color of the Year.
 
The Technical Association for the Pulp, Paper, Packaging and Converting Industries (TAPPI) Nonwovens Engineers and Technologists (NET) Division, Peachtree Corners, Ga., has made available program information for its 2014 Innovative Nonwovens Conference (NETInc), which will take place April 27-30 in Nashville, Tenn. Information may be found at netincevent.org.

Two products featuring Clinton, Mass.-based Aerotherm aerogel insulation’s Aerotherm® insulation have won 2014 International Trade Fair For Sporting Goods and Sports Fashion (ISPO) awards: Sweden-based Peak Performance’s Heli Pro Pants freeskiing pant; and France-based Millet’s MXP Down Tek Jacket + Pant.

Los Angeles-based Styku has added Fit Visualizer features to its SmartFit online fitting room platform.
 
Charleston, S.C.-based Vapor Apparel has added an 11-inch training sock to its offering of SubliSocks™ sublimation-friendly socks for the imprintable apparel market.
 
East Walpole, Mass.-based Hollingsworth & Vose has launched its website in Mandarin Chinese, available at http://cn.hollingsworth-vose.com. 

Quebec-based Victor Group Inc.’s Eco Intelligence® products have been third-party certified by SCS Global Services, Emeryville, Calif., to receive Association for Contract Textiles Inc.’s Facts™ Certification, which recognizes contract textiles that meet the NSF/ANSI 336 – 2011: Sustainability Assessment for Commercial Furnishings Fabric standard.

Research and Markets Ltd., Ireland, has published the report “Trends in World Textile and Clothing Trade 2.”

New York City-based Thames and Hudson Inc. has published “Pre-Islamic Carpets and Textiles from Eastern Lands,” by Friedrich Spuhler.
 
January/February 2014
 

People

Washington-based Cotton Council International’s (CCI’s) Board of Directors has elected Jordan Lea 2014 president. CCI’s Board also has elected the following 2014 officers: Dahlen K. Hancock, first vice president; Keith T. Lucas, second vice president; Anthony Tancredi, treasurer; Mark D. Lange, secretary; and Kevin Latner, assistant secretary. E. Hope “Hopie” Brooks III, James C. Massey and Cannon Michael have been elected 2014 CCI directors.

Lea

 
Washington, N.C.-based National Spinning Co. Inc.’s Board of Directors has elected James “Jim” Booterbaugh president. Former President James “Jim” Chesnutt remains CEO and Chairman of the Board.

Booterbaugh

 
The National Cotton Council of America (NCC), Cordova, Tenn., has elected the following 2014 officers: Wallace L. Darneille, chairman; Sledge Taylor, vice chairman; Clyde Sharp, secretary-treasurer; and Joe Nicosia, vice president. NCC also has given Senator Saxby Chambliss, R-Ga., the 2013 Harry S. Baker Distinguished Service Award for his extraordinary service, leadership and dedication to the U.S. cotton industry.

Darneille


Chambliss (left) receiving the 2013 Harry S. Baker Distinguished Service Award

 
H. Stoll GmbH & Co. KG, Germany, has named Andreas Schellhammer CEO.
 
Fountain Inn, S.C.-based Saati Americas Corp. has named Woody Woodham vice president, U.S. Protection Division; and William A. “Bill” Spano multifilament weaving manager.
 
Paris-based Lectra has appointed Edouard Macquin a member of the Executive Committee.


Macquin

 
Santa Monica, Calif.-based events and information services company Advanstar Global LLC has promoted Christopher Griffin to president, WWDMAGIC and Sourcing at MAGIC; and has promoted Leslie Gallin to president, Footwear, Advanstar Global.

Griffin

Gallin

 
Costa Mesa, Calif.-based Anna’s Linens has promoted Scott Gladstone to CEO.
 
Aurora, Ill.-based Processing Technologies International LLC has appointed Matthew Banach director of sales.
 
January/February 2014
 

Oerlikon Barmag Debuts WINGS POY 1800

Oerlikon Barmag, Germany, a member of Switzerland-based OC Oerlikon Management AG’s Manmade Fibers segment, has introduced a new yarn winder in its Winding Integrated Godet Solution (WINGS) product line. The company reports the WINGS POY 1800 model offers 20-percent greater productivity than the previous-generation model while taking up no more space on the production floor.  

Oerlikon Barmag has sold some 14,000 WINGS POY units since their introduction in 2007. Yarns produced on the machine are suitable for tire cord, seat belts, technical textiles and apparel, among other applications.

“With Wings POY 1800, we are once again underscoring our technological leadership in the area of filament spinning. We will use this technology to sustainably bolster our market share of more than 40 percent in the manmade fiber machinery industry,” said Stefan Kross, CEO, Oerlikon’s Manmade Fibers segment.  “Unlike any other spinning products in the marketplace, WINGS delivers efficient and profitable filament production while supplying the highest level of yarn quality.”


Oerlikon Barmag’s new WINGS POY 1800 model yarn winder

January/February 2014

Nilit Unveils NILIT® Heat Yarn

Nylon 6,6 fiber manufacturer Nilit Ltd., Israel, has introduced NILIT® Heat, a warming yarn that conserves and maintains natural body heat.

Nilit reports the yarn, which incorporates coffee charcoal created from coffee bean residue, offers superior thermo insulation, antibacterial properties, a strong deodorizing effect, and a sweat-free sensation for comfort and performance that lasts throughout the day. According to the company, the yarn offers the best warming performance when knitted as the inner layer of base layers, underwear, socks, legwear, sportswear and winterwear.

“We’re very excited about our innovative Nilit Heat yarn and its unparalleled performance,” said Alon Weiser, R&D and technical service manager, Nilit. “The complex structure of the coffee charcoal additive in this incredible yarn effectively captures body heat and keeps it in the garment, to keep wearers warm in any weather.”

January/February 2014

A New Route For Nanofibers

Nanofibers traditionally have been made using one of two methods: electrospinning or meltblowing. Both methods produce dry, filament nanofibers, and different iterations of those methods have been developed over the years, with those developments generally overseen by experts in the textile field.

Recently, another, very different method has come out of the chemical engineering field, almost as if by a fluke, and this new method produces staple fibers, which open up possibilities for a wide range of new end-use applications. XanoShear™ technology, developed at North Carolina State University (NCSU), was licensed in 2010 to Xanofi Inc., a Raleigh, N.C.-based startup established to commercialize the technology, which offers production at a considerably faster rate than electrospinning and can be scaled up easily by adding components to the machine.


The XanoShear™ machine’s flexibility to offer different diameters or pipe configurations, additional tanks, or other features enables processing of various volumes and fibers according to specifications.

Something In The Liquid
In the early 2000s, as Orlin Velev, Ph.D., then an assistant professor of chemical engineering and currently Invista Professor, Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, NCSU, was working in his chemistry lab making polymeric microrods using a colloid shear process, he noticed that some of the rods  appeared to be getting stretched much further and much more finely, forming nanofibers in the liquid. With his curiosity piqued, he began to play with shear and some chemical mechanisms to precipitate polymers out of their solvents. Several colleagues including Stoyan Smoukov, Ph.D.; Sumit Gangwal, Ph.D.; Pete Geisen; and others — with backgrounds primarily in chemical engineering and biotechnology — also became involved, and through NCSU’s graduate-level Technology Entrepreneurship and Commercialization course, with advice from Executive-in-Residence Miles C. Wright, they developed a business plan and formed Xanofi.

Velev, Smoukov and Geisen are now involved in technology and product development at Xanofi; and Wright serves as Xanofi’s CEO. Wright spoke to Textile World about the XanoShear technology and the company that is bringing products to market using that technology.

“Our core technology uses a solvent/antisolvent combination that forces a soluble polymer to phase separate back into a solid,” Wright said. “At the same time, shear within the liquid is being exerted, so that as it goes from liquid to solid, there’s a stretching  motion.” He added that through experimentation with that process, it became possible to better control the shape of the microrods and reduce them to fibers.

Wright said the staple nanofibers produced offer several advantages. Whereas electrospun filament fibers primarily are coated onto the surface of a substrate, XanoShear staple fibers can be distributed in a liquid and sprayed or wetlaid to make a 2-D or 3-D substrate, thereby creating materials that can’t be made using continuous fiber.

“Our applications range from 3-D cell culturing to protein additives for food, affinity or ion exchange chromatography, liquid or air filtration, and numerous others,” Wright said. “What we do doesn’t replace electrospinning or meltblowing. We’re going into applications and developing ways of producing products with a completely different advanced material, and we’re looking at those markets and applications that are enabled by our material, not the same ones that are served by electrospun or meltblown materials. It’s pretty easy for us to include our fibers in a slurry tank and have it 3-D-integrated into a wetlaid substrate. You can’t really do that with a continuous fiber.”


Dan Morton, process engineer at Xanofi, holds up a typical pressed mat of solid nanofibers.

The Machine: A Tale Of Bootstrap American Ingenuity
The machine concept for the XanoShear technology is relatively simple. “We started with a test tube technology,” Wright said. “Originally, we thought our commercial machine would look like a giant washing machine, basically like a test tube except a much bigger version. The problem with that concept is that it’s more of a batch process, and we wanted to move toward a more continuous process. We probably mapped out 12 or 13 different ways to create shear within a continuous flow of the liquid.

“As we started thinking about ways to do this, Pete [Geisen] came in one day with a yard sprayer. He messed with it and that morning he started producing nanofibers. Then we started thinking, ‘We need more power and volume — beer keg!’ So we quickly secured a keg and started producing nanofibers that day. That actually became a pretty good system that we still use as a quick and dirty testing platform,” Wright continued.

“Then we built a pilot machine, and we still use that basic concept. It’s just a functional machine, and we have a lot of room to engineer it to do a lot of different things — in terms both of volume and of fiber produced — by changing diameters, pipe configurations and such. There are a lot of knobs we can turn to produce different materials. It’s a pretty robust platform for doing different things.”

Xanofi is also developing a hardware-material system, dubbed XanoSpray, that will spray staple nanofibers onto roll goods. That project has received funding from the National Science Foundation.


A scanning electron micrograph of XanoMATRIX™ material shows the substrate’s chaotic architecture and high use of discrete fibers.

Business Model: Going Partners
Rather than sell machines or nanofiber to downstream producers, Xanofi has decided to partner with companies that would market products that it makes itself.

“We get a lot of requests to sell machines, but we don’t want to be an equipment manufacturer,” Wright explained. “And we get a lot of requests just to sell bulk fiber at commodity prices, but we do not want to be the Walmart of nanofibers — that takes a huge amount of infrastructure and cost. We want to develop products and find new uses for our advanced material. We’re unique in the fact that we own a platform. We might get something 80-, 90-, or 98-percent to an end product, but at the end of the day, we’ll partner with a  company that will take it to market.”

First XanoShear Products
Although Xanofi primarily aims to partner with other companies to develop and offer end products, its first product, a XanoMATRIX™ 3-D cell scaffold, has taken a slightly different path. The company teamed with the University of North Carolina, University College London and Cambridge University to develop the scaffolds. As company literature describes it, “Unlike other technologies, the chaotic architecture of our substrates and the high use of discrete fibers allows cells to easily migrate and propagate, reshaping the scaffold with more rubust nutrient gradients.”

“We’ll produce the scaffold, and cells will grow on that,” Wright said. “We will have 48- and 96-well plate versions, and we’re selling those well plates for the 3-D cell scaffold. We don’t have a partner for that — we wanted to get to a commercial product and then find a partner.” XanoMatrix will be released in February 2014.

In another project, Xanofi is developing an additive that will improve the hydrophobicity of C6 fluorochemistry.

“The shorter C6 chain has less breakoff and is better for the environment than C8 chemistry, but C6 chemistries lose about 30 percent of their hydrophobicity, so they don’t work as well as C8 in that area,” Wright said. “Through chemical modification, people are getting back to 80-percent hydrophobicity. If we build a simple additive for these C6 chemistries, we can get it back to about 95-percent efficacy quite inexpensively.”

Other products are under development also, including one involving corn proteins for food products and a second life science product involving affinity chromatography. Xanofi is partnering with several companies worldwide to bring a range of products to market.

January/February 2014

Thwing-Albert Debuts EJA Vantage Series Tensile Tester

Thwing-Albert Instrument Co., West Berlin, N.J., has introduced the EJA Vantage Series testing machine, which has its own touch screen control panel mounted to the side of the machine. This addition eliminates the need for a separate computer to run quality tests. The stand-alone instrument now can run tensile, peel, compression and coefficient of friction tests using the touch screen controls, and the built-in Bluetooth system makes it easy to connect to a network printer to generate and print reports from the test results, the company reports.

 A 7-inch or 10-inch touch screen is available. Customers may still elect to purchase MAP-4 software to connect the instrument to a computer to provide enhanced data analysis and additional user controls.

January/February 2014

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