Economic Stimulus Bill Contains Buy American Provisions That Could Include Textile Products

The economic stimulus bill passed by the Senate has a “Buy American” provision covering iron and
steel and other manufactured products used in construction, but does not include the specific
textile measure passed by the House.

The Senate version of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 mandates that iron
and steel and manufactured goods purchased for public works projects funded by the act be made in
the United States unless an international obligation would require that bidding be open to foreign
manufacturers. Textile products could be included in the category of “other manufactured goods.”
The Senate version of the bill does not include anything similar to the Kissell amendment,
sponsored in the House of Representatives by Rep. Larry Kissell, D-N.C. That amendment would expand
the “Buy American” requirements in the so-called Berry Amendment covering Department of Defense
(DoD) purchases of uniforms and other textile products to cover Department of Homeland Security
(DHS) procurement. The Kissell amendment specifically covers uniforms purchased by the
Transportation Security Administration, but it could be expanded through negotiations with other
countries to include other agencies such as Customs and Border Protection, the Federal Emergency
Management Agency and the US Immigration and Naturalization Service. DHS reportedly is opposing the
Kissell amendment.

Saying inclusion of the Kissell amendment in the final legislation is essential because of
its job-producing potential, Cass Johnson, president of the National Council of Textile
Organizations, noted that the amendment simply adopts a procurement system that has been in effect
for the DoD for more than 60 years, and it already includes the Coast Guard. He urged Congress to
ignore what he called “disingenuous outcries” that the bill is protectionist and to include “Buy
American” in the interest of creating jobs in a way that will not require any additional
expenditure of taxpayer money.

The fate of that measure and the other “Buy American” provisions will have to be hashed out
in a House-Senate conference committee.



February 10, 2009

The Rupp Report: ITMF Report On Cost Comparison

The International Textile Manufacturers Federation (ITMF), with its headquarters in Zurich,
Switzerland, is one of the oldest nongovernmental organizations. It was founded in 1904 at a
meeting held in Zurich and convened on the initiative of the British cotton-spinning industry.
That’s why it still has a very close relationship with the whole cotton industry. ITMF is probably
the most important and high-ranking textile association around the world. Members are associations
and other constituted organizations of textile manufacturers.

Textile World
and its sister magazines have reported on various occasions about ITMF.

The next big event will be in June 2009 on the occasion of the International Year of Natural
Fibres, declared by the United Nations (UN) General Assembly at the request of the UN’s Food and
Agriculture Organization.

Important Statistics

ITMF is dedicated to keeping its worldwide membership constantly informed through surveys,
studies and publications; and through the organization of annual conferences, participation in the
evolution of the industry’s value chain and publication of considered opinions on future trends and
international developments.

Recently, it released the 2008 edition of its biennial International Production Cost
Comparison. It is said to be the only consolidated source for benchmarking yarn and fabric
production costs prevailing in eight of the world’s most important textile manufacturing countries
– Brazil, China, Egypt, India, Italy, Korea, Turkey and the United States.

Different Cost Factors For Different Sectors

The textile industry segments analyzed are spinning, texturing, weaving and knitting.
Individual results are supplied for ring-spun, open-end (OE) and textured yarns, and for fabrics
woven and knitted from each of these yarn types.

In the different segments analyzed, the lowest production costs are achieved in different
countries. Total costs in ring-spinning are the lowest in India, closely followed by Turkey. In
rotor-spinning, the lowest total costs are recorded in the United States, followed by Turkey and
India.

In texturing, Korea realizes the lowest total costs, followed by India. For weaving, the
total costs of fabrics made of ring-spun yarn are similarly low in India, China, Egypt, Brazil,
Turkey and Korea. Fabrics made of rotor yarns can be produced at the lowest costs in Brazil, India
and Turkey. The production of fabrics knitted using ring-spun yarn can be realized at lowest costs
in India, followed by Turkey, whereas the lowest total costs of fabrics knitted using rotor or OE
yarn can be achieved in the United States, followed by Turkey.

The report highlights the changing cost structure in the primary textile industry by tracing
the impact of cost factors borne by manufacturers and presenting them on a standardized basis. This
allows the reader to readily compare elements of total manufacturing costs across representative
production facilities.

Detailed Breakdown

The presentation of manufacturing and total yarn and fabric costs incorporates a detailed
breakdown into the various cost components per kilogram of yarn and per meter of fabric, presenting
their relative importance in the countries under review.

The study incorporates a wide range of influences on the cost picture, from externally
determined factors like raw material and machinery prices to the local costs of labor, capital,
energy and other inputs to production.

For more information, visit
www.itmf.org.

February 10, 2009

BASF Announces Restructuring Moves

Germany-based BASF SE has announced it will be restructuring so it can focus on customer
industries. The initiatives include measures to further develop its Performance Products segment,
such as establishing a new Paper Chemicals division, and a review of strategic options for its
leather and textile chemicals business. BASF also is preparing to integrate Ciba businesses
following the acquisition of Switzerland-based specialty chemicals manufacturer Ciba Holding AG.

“With these initial steps, we are very clearly focusing our business on the needs of our
customers and markets and sharpening the profile of the segment’s divisions,” said Dr. John
Feldman, member of the Board of Executive Directors, Performance Products segment. “At the same
time, we are creating the conditions that we need to integrate the new Ciba businesses rapidly and
efficiently in the next step. After closing, we will develop the detailed organization for the
combined businesses with our new divisions together with colleagues from Ciba.”

The Paper Chemicals division will comprise BASF’s paper chemicals and binders and kaolin
minerals businesses, presently part of the Acrylics & Dispersions division. The Acrylics &
Dispersions division will be renamed Dispersions & Pigments, which will incorporate BASF’s raw
materials business for the coating and paint industry. The acrylics business will be moved to the
Petrochemicals division, and the superabsorbants business will become part of the Care Chemicals
division. Most of Ciba’s Coating Effects business will be incorporated into the Dispersions &
Pigments division following the discovery phase.

BASF’s leather and textiles business, part of the Performance Chemicals division, recently
has experienced low market growth and high competitive pressure. “Our employees have worked hard to
improve the business in recent years,” said Hans W. Reiners, head of Performance Chemicals. “In
view of the difficult market situation, the results are not sufficient to ensure long-term success
with our own means.” Consequently, the business unit has launched further efforts to increase
efficiency, with the expectation of reducing costs by 25 million euros by 2011. In addition, BASF
is considering future strategic options including forming a joint venture or selling the business.

Initial organizational changes will be effective April 1, 2009, and the integration of Ciba
into BASF is expected to begin in the second half of 2009.

February 10, 2009

Fezko Thierry Installs Mahlo Orthomat System

After testing various straightening systems from competing companies, Czech Republic-based
industrial fabrics producer Fezko Thierry A.S. selected the Orthomat MFRC-12 from Germany-based
Mahlo GmbH & Co. KG for installation on its laminating machine. The company credited Mahlo with
a speedy, quality installation; prompt and streamlined service; and good customer communication.
Because Fezko Thierry mainly supplies its fabrics to companies that service the automotive
industry, it must meet high-quality standards for its products.

January/February 2009

Atlas Copco Buys Compressor Rental Business

La Porte, Texas-based Atlas Copco Prime Energy LLC has purchased Scotland-based Aggreko Plc’s
compressor rental business. The deal, worth $18 million, expands Atlas Copco’s Specialty Rental
Division, adding some 200 oil-free air compressors and dryers to its European rental fleet. Various
Atlas Copco companies in Europe purchased the fleet assets.

“Aggreko’s business is a perfect fit with our Specialty Rental Division – as they serve
similar market segments and applications, broadening our customer base in Europe,” said Ronnie
Leten, business area president, Atlas Copco Compressor Technique. “The acquisition of the European
business of Aggreko Plc supports the growth of Specialty Rental’s core business, renting oil-free
air equipment.”

January/February 2009

Quality Fabric Of The Month: From Mars To MARS

Vectran®, a high-performance multifilament polyarylate fiber melt-spun from liquid crystal polymer, is manufactured by Kuraray America Inc., Fort Mill, S.C., a subsidiary of Kuraray Co. Ltd., Tokyo. The fiber’s high strength; low elongation and excellent creep resistance; high
abrasion, cut, chemical and impact resistance; excellent flex fatigue resistance; and other properties make it suitable for applications such as high-performance rope and cable, inflatables, puncture-resistant materials and electromechanical products. Its stature received a big boost after it was selected to be used in the airbags that cushioned the Mars Pathfinder’s landing on the Red Planet in 1997, according to Bob Knudsen, manager, sales and marketing, for Kuraray America’s Vectran Division. It also is used in various other aerospace applications.

chevroncover
The Magenn Air Rotor System (MARS) can be used to generate electrical power from wind
anywhere on the planet.

One of Vectran’s newest airborne applications is much closer to earth in Canada-based Magenn Power Inc.’s Magenn Air Rotor System (MARS), which can be deployed anywhere on the planet to generate electrical power using the steady winds up to 1,000 feet above the earth’s surface. MARS comprises a huge, helium-filled balloon-like structure carrying two generators connected to a ground station via a tether system containing a Vectran core with copper spiraled around it to
conduct electricity to the transformer for transfer to a power grid. Vectran fabric also covers the balloon.

Covington, Ky.-based braided textile manufacturer Atkins & Pearce Inc. (A&P) developed the tether system, which presented some major design challenges. “Beyond the need to get the electricity back to earth and hold the balloon in place, there weren’t a lot of guidelines in terms of what to use or other specs,” said Jeramie Lawson, director of new product development.

The system includes two tethers connected to the two generators and joining at a Y-shaped fitting, which joins a third tether that connects to the power grid. Each tether – containing 540 ends of 1,500-denier Vectran laid under equal tension inside a copper “slinky,” as Lawson described it, all covered by a braided jacket coated with a weather- and ultraviolet-protective polymer – is epoxy-bonded to the fitting, and the conductive wires are tied together to transmit the electricity. The system carries a tensile load of 10 tons, is light enough to be lifted by the helium in the balloon and has very little elongation.

hangingcarsTo test the tether’s performance, A&P strung up six automobiles on a single tether and hoisted them into the air with the help of a crane. The tether bore the weight of all six cars and provided power to run their headlights. By comparison, a steel tether snapped under
the weight of three cars.

MARS is targeted for release in 2011 to serve remote areas that cannot use traditional wind
turbines and/or that use diesel generators for power needs. Magenn Chief Marketing Officer Mac Brown said the balloon will measure 50 feet in diameter by 120 feet in length, and the system will generate 100 kilowatts of electricity – enough to power a small village in India, Africa or China.


For more information about Vectran®, contact Bob Knudsen (803) 396-7351, robert.knudsen@kurarayamerica.com.

For more information about Atkins & Pearce’s R&D capabilities, contact Jeramie Lawson (859) 356-4263,
jeramie.lawson@atkinsandpearce.com.

January/February 2009

January/February 2009

Biosafe Inc., Pittsburgh, has announced its Biosafe® antimicrobial has met ISO
10993-1 and USP bio-compatibility standards. Biosafe is available either as a powdered additive for
textiles and plastics, or as a masterbatch supplied RTP Co., Winona, Minn.

The Research Triangle Park, N.C.-based
American Association of Textile Chemists & Colorists (AATCC) and Raleigh,
N.C.-based
North Carolina State University’s (NCSU)’s College of Textiles Textile Education
Department have partnered to offer an online Textile Fundamentals education course. For more
information, visit
www.aatcc.org or
www.TexED.ncsu.edu.

Canada-based
Victor Group Inc. has launched eHome, a collection of affordable, high-performance
sustainable residential fabric designs.

bb
Victor Group’s new eHome sustainable fabrics collection

Germany-based
BBE Retail Experts has completed a trend analysis survey in the Netherlands,
Austria, Switzerland, Portugal, Italy, France and Spain, about interest in testing textiles for
harmful substances, and awareness of the Oeko-Tex® Standard 100. A summary of the survey,
commissioned by the Switzerland-based
Oeko-Tex Association, is available online at
www.oeko-tex.com/news.

Birdair Inc., Amherst, N.Y., has added an engineering office to its sales office
in Guadalajara, Mexico.

The
Southern Textile Association has relocated to: 469-C Hospital Dr., Gastonia, N.C.,
28054; (704) 215-4543; fax: (704) 671-2366. The mailing address is unchanged.

Rouse Enterprises LLC, Charlotte, now represents
Basofil Fibers LLC, Enka, N.C. Rouse is focusing on in-rubber applications and
other industrial end-use applications.

Research and Markets Ltd., Ireland, has released the following publications:
“Making the Transition from Traditional to Technical Textile Markets”; “Textiles – Global Strategic
Business Report”; and “Recycling in Textiles.”

Switzerland-based
Schoeller Technologies AG‘s coldblack® ultra-violet-protective textile technology
has been named a 2008 finalist for the Swiss Technology® Award, given by the
Swiss Economic Forum AG.

Kaeser Compressors Inc., Fredericksburg, Va., has released the SmartPipe™ product
catalog and installation guide, and the “Energy Savings in Compressed Air Systems” guide.

New York City-based
WFXOnDemand.com has upgraded its WFX Web Product Data Management (PDM) and Product
Lifecycle Management (PLM) solutions, enabling them to run on both Macintosh and personal
computers.

BASF Polyurethane Systems, Florham Park, N.J., has received the top supplier award
from
Donaldson Co., Minneapolis.

Tri Vantage LLC, Cleveland, now offers the Sunbrella® Renaissance collection of
area rugs and accessories.

Belgium-based
Balta Group‘s Balta Rugs division has relocated to: Nijverheidslaan 15, 8580
Avelgem, Belgium. Phone: +32 56 65 38 11; fax: +32 56 65 39 00; email:
rugs@baltagroup.com.

Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio-based
Emerald Performance Materials LLC‘s Emerald Foam Control division has opened a new
sales and technical center in Greer, S.C. The company also has established a toll-free number for
technical support: (866) 688-FOAM.

Chemical Market Associates Inc. (CMAI), Houston, has released the 2009 World
Butadiene Analysis, available in book and CD-ROM format with access to CMAI’s Online Capacity and
Supply/Demand databases.

Pure Fiber International Inc., Upland, Calif., has established a Business
Development and Private Label Division for its current bamboo home textile products and hotel bath
and bed linen products.

Fairfield, Calif.-based
ChemSW Inc. has launched TrainingLive, a Web-based environmental, health and
safety program for compliance-based safety requirements training.

ABC Industries Inc., Warsaw, Ind., has received ISO 9001 certification for its
plants in Warsaw and Grand Junction, Colo.

Zimmer Machinery Corp., Spartanburg, now offers parts and service for all Stork
printing machines through a partnership with
Elad Textile Parts, the Netherlands.

Texworld USA, New York City, has introduced the Eco-Textile Labeling Guide,
providing information on the latest organic textile standards and eco-textile certification.

Lectra Upgrades Diamino Marker-Making Solutions

Lectra, Paris, has upgraded its Diamino marker-making software – available as DiaminoFashion,
DiaminoFootwear, DiaminoFurniture and DiaminoTechTex – to provide more powerful marker-making
algorithms than previous versions and improved management of constraints specific to each market.

In addition to interactive manual marker making, the product offers automated marker making
that increases productivity and reduces fabric waste, according to Lectra. Customers report
material savings of 3 to 4 percent using the new software compared with previous versions. The new
system also takes into account the technical characteristics of the material to be cut and manages
patterned fabrics appropriately, recognizing and removing fabric flaws in cut pieces and monitoring
the grain line to improve cutting quality.

“The ability to combine these two modes of marker-making, applied to the specific business
constraints of fashion, furniture, automotive and industrial fabrics companies, is a considerable
competitive advantage for our customers and it is one of the key points which allows them to make
significant savings in terms of both fabric and time,” said Daniel Harari, Lectra CEO.

January/February 2009

New Lycra® Product Offers Function, Design Versatility

Wichita, Kan.-based Invista recently introduced Lycra® 2.0 tape for stretch apparel. Offering full
stretch and recovery, it is produced in film form and slit into tapes of varying widths. Through
the

application of heat, it bonds to hems, seams and bands, offering flat edges and no bulky
seams.

Initial focus is in intimate apparel. Invista launched Lycra 2.0 tape via a global student
competition. Design students from four internationally known design schools submitted 82 innovative
garments. Brandon Grimm of New York City’s Fashion Institute of Technology designed the winning
garment, a merry widow and knicker set that uses the tape for function and decoration.

lycra
Merry widow and knicker set by Brandon Grimm

Artwork courtesy of Doner

Reaction from the intimate apparel industry has been phenomenal, said Ninabeth Sowell,
Invista’s global marketing director, Intimate and Swim. Invista is working with major apparel
producers and brands as well as fabric companies in North and South America, Europe, and Asia.

In intimate apparel, the product is being used for waistbands, legs, bra straps and hems.
One firm is using it for drawstrings. It is available in a natural shade and was created to be
concealed, through a heat-bonding process, between fabric layers.

Currently being applied to nylon- or polyester-content fabrics, it has not been tested yet
with cottons or other fibers, but Sowell suspects it will work well with almost all fabrics.

The application of Lycra 2.0 tape to most garments requires no stitching. Although it costs
slightly more than other stretch products, there is a trade-off in reduced sewing costs.

“There is a lot of interest in Lycra 2.0 tape coming from other markets aside from
intimates,” Sowell added, mentioning activewear and swimwear as well as products for the home. “In
fact, interest has exceeded our expectations.

“It is gratifying to see our customers using imagination and creativity in creation of
garments,” she said. “Along with the obvious function and comfort factors, in many instances Lycra
2.0 tape is being used as part of the decoration. I do think that in difficult economic times,
innovation becomes more important.”

January/February 2009

Testing Update


W
hen asked “What types of capital equipment expenditures do

Textile World
readers’ companies make?” the leading response in the 2009 Reader Profile was lab/testing
equipment. Given the nature of textile products and processes, the response makes perfect sense.
Whether it is product quality, verification against regulated or vendor standards or even a little
reverse engineering – politely known in certain circles as deformulation – testing technology is an
everyday necessity. Recently, interest in product analysis has moved forward as concerns over
contaminants have made the news. Also, technical textile trends have made more people aware of the
physical testing necessary to market products like geotextiles and related performance products.

testingopen
Photography courtesy of X-Rite Inc.


Qualitest USA


According to Marcus Bergsten, product/marketing manager of Fort Lauderdale, Fla.-based
Qualitest USA, testers in the company’s Q-Line of Universal Testing Machines are typically used to
test breaking strength and elongation of textiles according to ASTM D5034. “They are used for
testing all textile products from yarns to heavy-duty geotextiles and fabric for personal
protection gear,” Bergsten said. “All manufacturers in the textile industry at all levels of the
added value chain will benefit from the Q-line, both for research and development work and for
quality control.”

The Q-line has been in full production since 2006, and its development was based upon a
previous product line.

“We have been supplying the market with High Quality Universal Testing Machines for more
than 15 years,” Bergsten said.

Bergsten added that the main attributes are that the company supplies lightweight testers
with a small footprint, which makes the testers easy to place in a lab; and they offer a wide test
range per load cell with extremely accurate test results that conforms to all applicable standards.


Measured Solutions


Measured Solutions Inc., Spartanburg, supplies laboratory instruments for testing cotton and
man-made fibers, and all types of yarns including spun, filament, textured, carpet, and industrial
yarns. Managing Director Mark Reese and his staff represent various firms including Germany-based
Textechno, Switzerland-based Rothschild-Instruments and Japan-based Keisokki; as well as FCS
Procedyne and Schwing Cleaning Systems, Aspex/SpinTrak Spinneret Inspection Systems, and Ceccato
Spinnerets.

Reese said spinners, weavers, institutes and yarn dealers can save testing costs by using
Textechno’s Statimat DS. First exhibited at ITMA 2007 in Munich and with the first delivery in
2008, the Statimat DS combines testing of yarn and thread tensile properties, unevenness, and count
in one tester.

“Common use of all peripheral components of the tester – like package changer, threading
mechanism for introducing the yarn sample into the test sections, yarn feeding device, waste yarn
disposal and instrument housing with protective front panel, as well as control electronics
including the personal computer (PC)-based Textechno Testcontrol system for the different test
modules built in – all lead to a very economic price for the Statimat DS compared to that for three
separate testing appliances. The operator presents the test samples to only one instead of several
different testers, which results in considerable time and labor savings, and all measured data are
presented in one test protocol, so that the data can be easily interrelated, for example, to
calculate tenacity from the measured strength- and yarn-count values,” Reese said.


Uster Tackles Slub Quality


Introduced in July 2008, the Uster® Fancy Yarn Profile for the Uster Tester 5 is a solution
for the quality control of slub yarns.

According to Gabriela Peters, product manager, yarn testing, Switzerland-based Uster
Technologies AG, the importance of quality control in yarn manufacturing is magnified when the
end-use is a high-cost product such as the latest denim jeans with fashionable slub yarns.
Producers of these yarns need to make them appear irregular, yet retain precise and consistent
control over quality – which means fewer complaints and, ultimately, more profit. Uster has tackled
this requirement with a system that analyzes slub yarn quality. The Uster Fancy Yarn Profile uses a
unique measuring method that makes it easier than ever to obtain all the quality-relevant
information for slub yarns, while maintaining the high standards of precision and reliability for
which the Uster Tester family is acknowledged, she explained.


A.B. Carter/Mesdan-Lab


Henderson Wise, national marketing manager of Gastonia, N.C.-based A.B. Carter Inc.,
represents the Autodyn 300 Automatic Strength Tester from the Mesdan-Lab division of Italy-based
Mesdan S.p.A.

The Autodyn 300 tests the tensile strength of 24 different yarns. Wise said Autodyn 300 has
modular features that also can work in semiautomatic mode for industrial yarns, hanks and fabrics.
The tester is controlled by flexible, easy-to-operate software, complying with all current
international textile standards. More than 30 test modules are available in the software. The
tester is versatile, accurate and reliable, thanks to a complete range of interchangeable clamps
and load cells, he said.


Advanced Testing Instruments (ATI)


Advanced Testing Instruments (ATI), Greer, S.C., has been featuring the TruBurst2 pneumatic
burst strength tester, which complies with ISO 13938-2 and ASTM D 3786. The TruBurst measures the
distension and time to burst as well as the pressure at burst. The TruBurst Advanced + includes a
cyclic function that allows the pressure to cycle up and down for a stretch and recovery test.
According to the company, the fully pneumatic and non-contact laser distension measurement
guarantees accurate, consistent and reproducible results. In production for two years, this
bursting strength tester for fabric and nonwovens testing offers pneumatic versus hydraulic
bursting.

ATI also offers the Textest Air Permeability Tester FX 3300 Labotester III, which is used to
determine the air permeability of flat materials and foam cubes. The measuring range covers dense
papers and airbag fabrics as well as extremely open nonwovens and forming fabrics.

By means of the Labodata III Evaluation Program, the test results can be converted from air
permeability into the pressure drop at a given air velocity. This value, which is important for gas
filter materials, is shown both numerically and as a curve depicting pressure drop versus air
velocity in double logarithmic scale. According to ATI, the instrument works in accordance with
AFNOR G 07-111, ASTM D 737, ASTM D 3,574, BS 5,636, DIN 53,887, EDANA 140.1, EN ISO 7,231, EN ISO
9,237, JIS L 1,096-A, TAPPI T 251, and other standards.

 


Q-Lab Corp.


Westlake, Ohio-based Q-Lab Corp. offers new lightfastness testing technology with the Q-Sun
B02 Lightfastness Tester. In production for approximately 18 months, the Q-Sun B02 incorporates the
newest xenon technology to meet ISO 105 B02 and AATCC textile standards more efficiently and
affordably. According to Q-Lab, the B02’s optical filters maintain the required spectrum
indefinitely, so they do not need to be replaced unless they are broken, or the test method
followed specifies regular filter replacement. Its patented Solar Eye Irradiance Control sets a new
standard in calibration and takes only seconds, so there is little chance for operator error, and
expensive calibration contracts are not required.

According to Q-Lab, while any textile lab can benefit from the Q-Sun B02, the tester’s
affordability and efficiency make it an ideal choice for small labs that previously could not
afford xenon lightfastness testing.


X-Rite


Kentwood, Mich.-based X-Rite Inc.’s Product Manager Richard Knapp said the Color iQC Version
6.0, introduced in November 2008, is the new major release in the X-Rite Color iMatch and Color iQC
family of color formulation and quality control products.

“While there have been several color supply chain solutions available over the last five
years, none of them has been very successful or received broad adoption,” Knapp said. “When we
tried to understand why this was, we quickly found that no two companies followed the same process
and that all existing systems were far too rigid in their implementation and imposed a specific
workflow on the users. With Color iQC Version 6.0, we have produced a color supply chain solution
that can significantly reduce the time it takes to develop colors, is adaptable to existing
customer workflows and business methods, and can be aligned with a customer’s parallel business
processes.”

In terms of prospects, Knapp added: “This new product allows us to work with customers
throughout the color development process: designers, buyers, brand managers, quality control, and
producers. This product also allows for the expansion of color supply chain management into areas
that were previously excluded and into hard-line products as well.”


HunterLab


Hal Good, director of marketing services at Reston, Va.-based HunterLab, explained that the
UltraScan Pro® color measurement spectrophotometer has interesting attributes, and scanning as low
as 350 nanometers (nm) enables measurement of ultraviolet (UV)-blocking materials. He also said
scanning up to 1050 nm enables measurement of camouflage materials. The 5-nm optical resolution and
reporting interval enables precise color measurement of dyes that have sharp spectral cutoff
characteristics. According to Good, the wavelength range is wider than any other color measurement
spectrophotometer. Target customers are those that need to have accurate color measurement of
fabric, yarn, thread or fiber. In addition to measuring visual color, the UltraScan Pro also
enables measurement into the near infrared for camouflage materials, as well as the measurement of
UV-blocking characteristics of materials and the effect of whitening agents.


Datacolor


Bob Karpowicz, Lawrenceville, N.J.-based Datacolor’s product manager, instruments, spoke of
the December 2008 release of the Check® II Portable Spectrophotometer.

“Most users sort right on the factory floor, so measuring with a portable instrument is the
key to efficiency,” Karpowicz said. “However, the competing instruments do not have the versatility
of the Check II, which sorts using L*a*b*, LCh or CMC tolerances, depending on the needs and
preferences of the user.

“Additionally, we’ve reduced the time our customers spend transferring data to their PC
software by implementing wireless data transfer on the Check II. Now Datacolor Check II users can
send data via Bluetooth or existing Wi-Fi® networks straight from the instrument.

“Besides the the Check II’s exclusive three-mode 555 Shade Sorting function and high-speed
wireless operation, the Check II offers unparalleled agreement with our Datacolor 600 reference
grade spectrophotometer that most textile mills use for color matching. That means that the numbers
you get sorting with the Check II will agree very closely with your mills’ numbers,” Karpowicz
concluded.


Update: Textile Technology Center At Gaston College


Belmont, N.C.-based Textile Technology Center Director John A. Anderson stated that the
center’s mission is to be of service to the textile industry and assist the industry in solving
problems. The center has five testing labs specializing in fiber, yarn, fabric performance, defect
analysis and microscopy. New capabilities are currently being installed as a result of a recent
donation from Fort Mill, S.C.-based Wellman Inc. New services will include testing for metals, such
as lead in fabrics, to the parts-per-million level using inductively coupled plasma spectroscopy;
determining polyester composition using gas chromatography (GC); ultraviolet/visusal analysis of
polymers for component levels; differential scanning calorimetry analysis for thermal properties of
polymers and other materials; various wet analytical techniques and custom analysis of materials
for purity using high-pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC); GC/Mass Spec for unknown analysis of
polymer or material components and impurities; and determining oligimer content of polyester using
gel permeation chromatography/HPLC.

“As we carry out our mission to be of service to the textile industry, we continue to search
for emerging segments that can benefit from our services, technologies and cumulative expertise
through the ‘Center of Excellence’ shared resource concept,” Anderson said. “To use Benjamin
Franklin’s words in a slightly different context than he originally spoke, ‘We must hang together,
gentlemen … else, we shall most assuredly hang separately.'”

January/February 2009

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