IMB Select To Focus On Supply Chain

Germany-based Koelnmesse GmbH, organizer of IMB — World of Textile Processing, has created a new
trade fair format under the IMB umbrella and next year will debut IMB Select 2010 — Fashion &
Textiles: IT-Systems, Services and Strategies. The new format, to premiere Nov. 10-11, 2010,
represents a further development of IMB Forum, which has been held in conjunction with IMB — World
of Textile Processing, and will focus on the entire vertical supply chain for the fashion and
textile industries.

“In IMB Select we are creating a product developed in partnership with companies that is
100-percent focused on the wishes of visitors,” said Udo Traeger, head of Koelnmesse’s Furniture,
Interior Design & Textiles division. “IMB Select is an excellent connecting link to IMB —
World of Textile Processing to be held in May 2012.”

The new format will emphasize the importance of information technology (IT) systems to
integration of activities and to transparent communication among the various links within the
supply chain for apparel production and textile and flexible materials processing. The show also
will present ancillary processes along the supply chain.

“Visiting this trade fair will be of immense importance for all decision-makers,” said
Bettina Glamsch, IMB product manager. “It is the only place where they will get a complete overview
of the IT industry’s offers for the sector. It will enable key investment decisions to be made
based on flawless information.”

September 29, 2009

Ems Group Acquires Nexis Fibers

Switzerland-based Ems Group — a global company with performance polymers and fine
chemicals/engineering companies operating under the name Ems -Chemie Holding AG — has purchased
Germany-based Nexis Fibers GmbH — a producer and marketer of polyamide and other specialty
technical fibers — from ExNex AG, formerly known as Nexis Fibers AG. ExNex had filed for
bankruptcy, and other business activities of the company have already been sold.

The transaction is still pending final contracts and approval from the appropriate
authorities. Exact terms of the sale were not disclosed, but the purchase price is reported to be a
number in the low single-digit millions that Ems Group will finance using its own liquid assets.

Ems Group reports the acquisition will strengthen its specialty technical fibers business,
Ems-Griltech. The company will integrate Nexis Fibers and Ems-Griltech, operating both the Nexis
production site in Neumünster, Germany, and the Ems-Griltech facility in Domat/Ems, Switzerland.

Nexis Fibers currently employs 95 people and has annual net sales of approximately 40 million
Swiss francs.

September 29, 2009

Doubletex Launches Ecoterra Fabric Collection

Montréal-based Doubletex — a woven and nonwoven fabrics manufacturer, and a provider of commission
dyeing and finishing, converting, quilting and other services — has created the Ecoterra
collection of eco-friendly fabrics containing 100-percent certified organic cotton and Greensboro,
N.C.-based Unifi Inc.’s Repreve® recycled polyester.

The collection includes Ecoflex Poplin and Twill — two additions to Doubletex’s Truflex™
line of comfort stretch fabrics — and EcoDrill — a sturdy high-performance twill — all of which
are comprised of a blend of 35-percent organic cotton, 35-percent Repreve recycled polyester, and
30-percent polyester. Also included are EcoTwist, a 100-percent organic cotton dobby; and All in
One, a 100-percent ripstop made with stretch Repreve aio® yarn that has an antimicrobial,
moisture-management and soil-release finish.

Doubletex will debut the Ecoterra fabric collection at Expo Hightex, to be held October 7-8
in Montréal.

September 29, 2009

Kenyon Launches FR T-Shirt Featuring Outlast® Viscose Fiber

Peace Dale, R.I.-based Kenyon Consumer Products, a supplier of apparel and accessories for outdoor
enthusiasts, has introduced a flame-retardant (FR) modacrylic T-shirt featuring Outlast® viscose
fiber for temperature control. The shirt was originally developed as a baselayer shirt for military
personnel — an application in which protection and sweat-reduction properties as well as wearer
comfort are important. The shirt is now available commercially in silk-weight and medium-weight
versions.

According to Boulder, Colo.-based Outlast Technologies Inc., the T-shirt passes the ASTM D
6413-99 “Standard Test Method for Flame Resistance of Textiles (Vertical Test),” and was shown in
laboratory tests to reduce sweat by 30 percent.

“The shirt is well-suited for military combat situations to enhance the soldiers’ performance
by reducing sweat,” said Mike Henshaw, director of operations, Outlast Technologies. “The Outlast
viscose with temperature regulating technology keeps skin temperature cooler, which helps decrease
perspiration in warm environments where military personnel are often stationed.”

“Adding Outlast viscose to the shirt has resulted in a product that has double the comfort —
soft, comfortable, easy-to-wear fabric with temperature regulation so the wearer sweats less,” said
Andy Curtis, owner, Kenyon Consumer Products. “There really isn’t anything else like it on the
market.”

September 29, 2009

Idalica Presents E2E Apparel Software Solution

Tustin, Calif.-based Idalica — a provider of enterprise resource planning and customer
relationship management business software solutions — has announced the launch of its End to End
(E2E) customizable apparel software that combines financial, customer relationship and supply chain
management into one solution to improve the efficacy of businesses operations. Functions of
Idalica’s E2E business package include an integrated account system; apparel order and product
creation; the ability to link orders to inventory, and with the general ledger and reporting; and
electronic communication for global integration.

Idalica will launch its E2E solution at Technology Solutions, the semi-annual information
technology (IT) exposition and conference for the sewn products industry, to be held September
30-October 2 alongside Material World at the California Market Center in Los Angeles.

September 29, 2009

QuestaWeb GTM Suite Certified For SAP® ERP Integration

Westfield, N.J.-based QuestaWeb Inc., a provider of Web-based integrated global trade management
(GTM) solutions, has announced its Global Trade Management 4.2.26 suite of multinational trade
solutions has been certified by The SAP Integration and Certification Center (ICC) for integration
with the SAP® ERP (enterprise resource planning) application. After evaluating QuestaWeb’s software
within the “Integration Assessment Based Certification” framework, ICC certified the download
Material Master, Vendor Master, Commercial Invoice and Purchase Order lists and details functions.
ICC also has certified the software as “SAP Solution Manager Ready.”

According to QuestaWeb, Global Trade Management 4.2.26 software streamlines cross-border
trade processes and helps supply chain participants – including exporters, freight forwarders,
carriers, customs brokers, agents, financial institutions and importers – to collaborate to move
goods worldwide rapidly, securely and compliantly. The company also reports the modular-designed
suite makes use of the Internet to facilitate global trade activities.

“From a strategic point of view, it was logical for QuestaWeb to undergo the certification
process and align the top ERP application with the foremost Web-based GTM system,” said Wayne
Slossberg, vice president, QuestaWeb. “Achieving this certification underscores QuestaWeb`s ongoing
commitment to develop and offer advanced solutions that not only solve customers` global trade
management issues but also reduce their implementation time and costs. Being able to offer our
customers an out-of-the-box integration between their SAP ERP application and Global Trade
Management will reduce their total cost of ownership.”

September 29, 2009

Industry And Labor Seek More Job Creation With Homeland Security Purchases

US textile manufacturers and organized labor have filed comments with the Department of Homeland
Security (DHS), charging that its interim rule covering the Buy American textiles provisions in the
recently enacted American Recovery and Reinvestment Act will fall short of the legislation’s goal
of creating more job opportunities unless changes are  made.

A group of 10 fiber and textile organizations and the textile labor union Workers United say
they are “deeply concerned” that the interim DHS rule fails to fulfill the legislative and
executive intent of the act by permitting what they say are loopholes that allow imported goods and
decreased domestic content to eliminate US textile and apparel jobs and hinder investment.

The sponsor of the Buy American amendment to the homeland security bill, Rep. Larry Kissell,
D-N.C., echoed those sentiments in a letter to DHS pointing out that the intent of  his
amendment was to create jobs, and the interim rule falls short of that in several respects.

The industry and labor filing says that in enacting the so-called Kissell Amendment 
covering procurement of textiles and apparel, Congress and the administration emphasized the
importance of creating jobs with DHS purchases of clothing and other textile items. Their filing
lists nearly 100 textile and apparel products used by DHS and the Department of Defense that that
they feel should have a domestic content requirement. A major question is just how many of these
items DHS will define as being “directly related to national security” as required by the law.

“Any rule allowing unnecessary use of non-domestic parts will substantially undermine the
job-creating capability of the Kissell Amendment’s provisions,” the associations’ letter says.

Citing a number of problems with the proposed rule, the associations say DHS’s definition of
“items directly related to national security” at the present time is “confusing” and will greatly
complicate the ability of contractors and government procurement officers to implement the law. A
simple solution to this problem, they say, is to apply the criteria that have been used for
Department of Defense procurement for more than 60 years under the so-called Berry Amendment, and
not create another list of new criteria.

They also say exempting imports from Canada, Mexico and Chile from the domestic requirement
because those nations were not notified in a timely fashion is a mistake that casts a cloud over
current and future procurement.

The associations believe that adopting their recommendations will enable DHS to implement the
Kissell Amendment “fully and faithfully” and create and save the most US jobs possible.

Rep. Kissell told DHS it has adopted an “unnecessarily restrictive definition of items
directly related to national security interests,” and pointed out that this would unnecessarily
exclude certain textile products from procurement. “My amendment was intended to be an extension of
the Berry Amendment to DHS,” he said. “By creating a new definition for purposes of applying this
amendment, DHS is undermining the intent of Congress and creating unnecessary complications in the
procurement process.”

Kissell emphasized that the amendment was enacted to benefit US manufacturers, particularly
in the textile industry, saying, “It is incumbent upon DHS in drafting final rules to implement the
amendment to ensure that US producers of textile components and products have the ability to
compete and seek full procurement advantages as intended by the statute.”



September 22, 2009

Hanesbrands To Sell Yarn Operations To Parkdale

Hanesbrands Inc., Winston-Salem, N.C., has announced it will discontinue its own yarn production
and source all yarn from major yarn suppliers. The plan calls for the sale of three of the branded
apparel maker’s yarn manufacturing operations to Gastonia, N.C.-based sales yarn manufacturer
Parkdale Mills, and the shuttering of a fourth operation.

Hanesbrands stated that it is not strategically advantageous to continue to produce its own
yarn, and outsourcing that production will not change material costs for the company. In addition,
it expects to realize $100 million in balance sheet benefits within six months after the sale,
which is expected to be completed in the fourth quarter of 2009.

“We are focused on optimizing the investments we have made in our supply chain that give us
a competitive advantage,” said Richard A. Noll, chairman and CEO, Hanesbrands. “Producing our own
yarn, when more than adequate large-scale supplies exist, serves no strategic purpose. Outsourcing
yarn is a logical evolutionary step to drive value and improve the use of our assets.”

Parkdale will acquire the operations of Hanesbrands’ Rabun Gap, Ga., Mountain City, Tenn.,
and Galax, Va., yarn facilities, which altogether employ 780 workers. The three plants will
continue to supply yarn to Hanesbrands, as will other existing Parkdale plants in the United
States. According to Hanesbrands, these supplies will satisfy its requirements for a significant
portion of its apparel production in the Western Hemisphere.

Immediately, Hanesbrands also will close its fourth yarn facility in Sanford, N.C.,
impacting some 150 employees; as well as its cotton warehouse in Advance, N.C., and its yarn
warehouse in Clemmons, N.C. Together, the warehouses employ 25 workers.

September 22, 2009

NatureWorks Unveils Two Ingeo™ Bioresins For Meltblown Nonwovens

NatureWorks LLC, the Minnetonka, Minn.-based manufacturer of biopolymers derived from plant sugars
and offered under the Ingeo™ brand, now offers two grades of Ingeo bioresins for use in meltblown
nonwovens applications including filters and wipes. With the addition of the new grades to the
Ingeo product range for nonwovens applications, a comprehensive range of Ingeo fabrics can be
produced using all primary nonwoven fabric-forming processes, according to the company.

Tests conducted at Greenville, Wis.-based meltblown machinery manufacturer Biax-FiberFilm
Corp. have shown the two new grades, 6252D and higher-viscosity grade 6201D, are suitable for a
variety of applications. The company reports its meltblowing lines feature a unique high-pressure
die design that enables processing of higher-viscosity grades and production of fabrics exhibiting
greater strength than can be achieved using conventional meltblowing machinery.

“Our development of an Ingeo meltblown substrate significantly broadens the variety of
applications in which this material can be used,” said Doug Brown, president, Biax-FiberFilm. “An
Ingeo meltblown nonwoven offers an estimated 30 to 50 percent cost savings over conventional
fiber-based nonwoven roll goods and a significant advantage in price stability compared to
petroleum-based products.” He added that Ingeo meltblown fiber can be mixed with wood pulp or
viscose to provide significantly increased absorption properties for applications such as
performance wipes.

In addition, Ingeo’s suitability for use in nonwoven substrates produced on conventional
meltblowing equipment has been evaluated by researchers at the University of Tennessee Nonwovens
Research Lab, Knoxville, Tenn.

“As interest grows in polymers made from renewable resources, equipment manufacturers,
process developers and researchers have been exploring solutions that offer meltblown nonwoven
fabrics that both perform well and achieve a lower carbon footprint than the existing
petroleum-based incumbents,” said Robert Green, director of fibers and nonwovens, NatureWorks.

According to NatureWorks, production of Ingeo produces significantly fewer carbon dioxide
emissions and requires significantly less energy usage than production of polypropylene or
polyethylene terephthalate.



September 22, 2009

TenCate’s Mirafi® BXG Geogrids Succeed In Montana DOT Study

Pendergrass, Ga.-based TenCate Geosynthetics North America — a division of the Netherlands-based
Royal Ten Cate — reports that its Mirafi® BXG base reinforcement geogrids outperformed all tested
biaxial geogrids, including traditional extruded biaxial geogrids, in an independent study
performed for the Montana Department of Transportation (DOT) and the Federal Highway Administration
examining the use of reinforcement geosynthetics in unsurfaced roads built on soft subgrades.

In the study, the Western Transportation Institute evaluated eight geogrids against two
control sections and found that TenCate’s Mirafi BXG woven geogrids enabled high strength
transference from geogrid to soil, preventing rupturing. The study reports the TenCate geogrids had
“very little rib damage” and provided better rutting performance than the other geogrids that were
evaluated.

“We are extremely pleased with the results of this independent study,” said Brett Odgers, PE,
roadway reinforcement market manager, TenCate Geosynthetics. “Our geogrid production technology has
allowed us to produce the most effective reinforcement geogrid available on the market. We are also
pleased that this research finally dispels the myth that old extruded geogrid technology
outperforms the revolutionary woven geogrid technology.”

September 22, 2009

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