BASF, Louis Féraud Unveil Cobranding Program In Thailand

High-end department stores in Thailand now offer Paris-based Louis Féraud’s men’s shirt collection
featuring Germany-based BASF AG’s Non Iron technology. As part of a cobranding effort, the shirts
are labeled with BASF Non Iron and Louis Féraud hangtags. The collection also will be offered in
Indonesia and Vietnam.

Through BASF’s Non Iron Partner Mill Program, apparel fabric producers meeting BASF’s
provisions for using its Non Iron cross-linking technology may utilize BASF’s marketing strategies.
The technology eliminates the need to iron cotton apparel and ensures comfort, shape retention and
a fresh look, BASF reports.

“Application of the Non Iron technology is the beginning of a new era for [Louis Féraud],”
said Khun Patcharawan Boonnamsap, director of the board, Cassardi International Co. Ltd., the sales
and marketing division of Thailand-based importer and brand manufacturer Boonsiri International
Group. “With the Non Iron technology, customers can enjoy a modern style and a higher comfort
level. It will require less energy to maintain clothes, something especially invaluable for people
when traveling.”



January/February 2007

Fibreguide Unveils FG10E Jet Series For Extrusion Spinning

England-based Fibreguide Ltd. now
offers the FG10E jet range for extrusion spinning applications. The high-purity alumina ceramic
jets are suitable for all flat yarn applications, and can be configured in twin or multi-position
jet arrangements offering 4-, 5-, 6.5- and 10-millimeter pitch; and up to 20 or more ends.
According to the company, the jets feature a patented chamber design that maximizes interlacing
efficiency, minimizes guide wrap and yarn damage, reduces air consumption and leads to improved
downstream performance. The jets also feature a patent-pending mounting arrangement to ensure
precise alignment of the jet cores vis-à-vis the running yarns.

Fibreguide also offers the FG10SE single-position jet, used in partially oriented and fully
drawn yarn spinning applications that do not require close pitch jets.

Greenville-based textile broker Frankl & Thomas Inc. is the North American distributor
for Fibreguide’s new jets.



January/February 2007

Erhardt + Leimer Launches ELSmart SW 95 Guider System

Duncan, S.C.-based Erhardt + Leimer
Inc. has introduced the ELSmart SW 95 advanced segmented guider roller system for use with nearly
all textile web types.

The new system is self-supporting and easy-to-install, according to the company. Features
include the new FE 40 digital infra-red wide band sensor and a new digital controller. The system
also comes equipped with either an electric or a pneumatic actuator, and is available to widths of
up to 3,800 millimeters.

The FE 40 focuses on the placement of the web edge rather than comparing light volumes, and
also does not respond to ambient light. According to Erhardt + Leimer, the sensor responds even to
transparent webs including those with variable transparencies throughout the web, making it
especially suitable for use with open-structured webs such as some curtains.

Erhardt + Leimer also notes the redesigned guiding roller slats provide greater contact
surface. In addition, their optimized profile shape ensures gentle, reliable web guiding even at
high line speeds, the company reports.



January/February 2007

Quality Fabric Of The Month: Beauty Treatment

Cupron Inc. — a Greensboro, N.C.-based developer and provider of copper compound technology for medical, textile and cosmetic applications — has launched Cupron™ “Beauty While You Sleep,” a commercial line of pillows and pillowcases that help reduce wrinkles and liver spots while one is sleeping.

Cupron technology involves the use of copper oxide to deliver antimicrobial and healing properties to a range of textiles and other products for the healthcare, hospitality, food-processing, military and consumer sectors. By interrupting a microbe’s ability to duplicate or
reproduce, copper oxide causes it to die naturally and prevents creation of resistant strains. The compound also promotes healing of sores and wounds because it binds amino acids and helps create collagen.

Cupron is added to textile fibers in one of two ways: by incorporation into the polymer melt of polyester, nylon, various olefins and other man-made fibers; or by plating onto cellulosic fibers such as lyocell and cotton. The company reports the resultant fibers offer permanent
antimicrobial and healing benefits, and are completely safe and nontoxic to humans and animals. They also can be processed using existing manufacturing equipment.


cuprotex
The technology incorporated into Cupron “Beauty While You Sleep” pillows and pillowcases
utilizes the intrinsic properties of copper oxide and has been shown to significantly improve skin
tone and texture while one sleeps.

According to Jeffrey Gabbay, the company’s president and CEO, while copper destroys a wide range of micro-organisms including viruses, resistant bacterial strains, fungi and dust mites — and thus also eliminates odors caused by bacteria and fungi that accumulate in the fabric, it is the mineral’s healing power that is the emphasized benefit in Cupron’s pillows and pillowcases. Cupron fibers evaluated in independent clinical trials were shown to significantly improve skin tone and
texture during sleep. The company claims the pillowcases present an alternative to cosmetic surgery and collagen injections, as well as to the application of facial creams, to rejuvenate the skin.

Gabbay describes Cupron not as a textile technology, but rather as a healthcare technology for which textiles are a major application. He sees the Cupron-infused textiles as part of a system — a system that reduces hospital-acquired infections, improves skin tone and texture, or keeps things clean.

“These are medical devices,” he said, noting the products are undergoing testing by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA). “The driving force is to prove medicinal efficacy. The FDA has agreed, based on some of the scientific evidence presented, that there can be classification of a medical device in areas that previously have not been classified, such as a sheet and a pillowcase.
These types of things are now under consideration,” he said.

He also stressed that the fabrics and end products are made in the United States rather than sourced from other countries. “We’re going to bring back a lot of textile jobs in the United States,” he said, noting the importance of quality control and a lack of confidence that outsourced products would be of comparable quality. “The medical device classification requires compliance with FDA regulations, including how a fabric is constructed to give a specific end-use. If I say a fabric gives 99.99-percent microbial reduction and someone decides to save a little money and not
put the same amount of protection in the fabric, that’s putting someone’s life in danger.”

The fabrics used in Cupron’s new pillows and pillowcases are woven in a 4 X 1 twill with a copper-impregnated polyester filament fill supplied by Greensboro-based Unifi Inc. and a Pima cotton warp. Cupron provides its compound in masterbatches to Unifi, enabling the yarn maker to produce large lots of the filament — which also has been treated with a wicking surfactant and is very breathable, Gabbay said.

The pillowcases and several other Cupron consumer products are now available online at the company’s website. Both pillowcases and pillows will be available in retail stores beginning in January 2007, and Gabbay said sheets, made of the same fabrics that go into sheets intended for hospital use, also will be available soon.


For more information about Cupron consumer products, contact Brian Shore (336) 210-8253,
brian@cupron.com.

Rieter To Sell Man-Made Filament Machinery Business To Bavaria Maschinenfabrik

Rieter Holding AG, Switzerland, has
agreed to sell the remaining operations of the Filament Yarn Technologies (FYT) business unit
within Rieter Machine Works Ltd. — a subsidiary of its Textile Systems Division — to Germany-based
Bavaria Maschinenfabrik GmbH for an undisclosed price. The impending sale follows Rieter’s
previously announced sale of FYT’s cabling, twisting and texturing machinery operations to
France-based Co-Martin.

The operations to be sold comprise the manufacture of machinery and systems for production
of man-made continuous filament. Rieter based its decision to sell the business on the company’s
inability to develop it profitably. Bavaria Maschinenfabrik will retain the unit’s approximately 80
employees, and continue to provide service to its customers and supply spare parts.

Bavaria Maschinenfabrik, a systems engineering company, is a subsidiary of Germany-based
Bavaria Industriekapital AG, an industrial holding company that acquires well-positioned mid-sized
European companies with earnings enhancement potential.

Rieter said it will continue to serve its man-made staple-fiber customers, noting its staple
fiber machinery is used to produce both blended yarns containing man-made fibers and 100-percent
cotton yarns.

December 19, 2006

Lanxess Sells North American TPC Business To StarChem

Germany-based Lanxess AG has agreed
to sell its North American Textile Processing Chemicals (TPC) business unit to StarChem Ltd. — a
textile and specialty chemicals subsidiary of Dalton, Ga.-based Star Holdings Inc. — for an
undisclosed price. The TPC business in North America includes operations in Wellford, S.C., and
Montreal. StarChem will be based in Wellford and will continue to employ most of the TPC workforce.

The sale of the North American operations follows Lanxess’s divestment of all TPC operations
outside of North America in November 2006. Prior to finding a buyer, Lanxess had planned to close
the Wellford facility. “I am delighted that we can now offer employees new prospects,” said Axel C.
Heitmann, Management Board chairman, Lanxess.

The companies expect to complete the transaction by the end of 2006.

December 19, 2006

DyStar Opens Facilities In China, Turkey

Germany-based DyStar Textilfarben
GmbH & Co. Deutschland KG has opened a textile dye production facility in Nanjing, China, and a
service lab in Çorlu, Turkey.

“The new production site in Nanjing is our response to growing demand for quality dyes in
China and strengthens our position in the world’s leading market for textiles,” said Dr. Rudolf
Strobl, CEO, during the opening ceremony at the new facility.

The company has invested approximately US$55 million in the 53,000-square-meter Nanjing
facility, which comprises 12 buildings and will employ some 300 people. The investment is DyStar’s
second-largest-ever in a site located outside Germany.

The Nanjing site is the newest of a number of facilities DyStar operates in China, including
a nine-year-old production facility in Wuxi, customer service centers in Shanghai and Hong Kong,
and production facilities in Qingdao and Hangzhou. In all, DyStar operates seven companies in China
as well as a network of sales offices and service labs nationwide.

The company’s new service lab in Turkey is located about 90 kilometers northwest of Istanbul
in a major textile-producing area. “Turkey has become an important textile producer in recent years
and is now our main growth and volume market in Europe,” said Burkhard Straube, head of operations
for the Europe/Africa/Middle East region. “Our new lab offers customers top-quality service on
their doorstep.”

Services offered at the new lab include technical consulting, presentations, training and
product development. A highlight of the facility is a competence center for garment dyeing and
finishing.



December 19, 2006

Icahn’s AREP Holding Company To Purchase Additional WestPoint Stock

New York City-based American Real
Estate Partners LP (AREP), of which investor Carl Icahn is chairman, has entered into a
subscription and standby commitment agreement with New York City-based WestPoint International
Inc., its majority-owned subsidiary, to invest up to $200 million to purchase newly issued
preferred stock in the home textiles company.

AREP will purchase 1 million shares of preferred stock for $100 per share, for a total of
$100 million. AREP also will purchase an additional 1 million shares of preferred stock that are
being offered to WestPoint’s other stockholders of record at the same price per share if those
stockholders do not purchase all of those shares.

December 12, 2006

Culp Posts Q2 Profit

Culp Inc., High Point, N.C., reported
its second consecutive quarterly profit following a string of losses going back to the first
quarter of fiscal year 2005. The upholstery and mattress ticking fabrics manufacturer posted a net
profit of $812,000, or 7 cents per diluted share, for the fiscal-year 2007 second quarter (Q2)
ended Oct. 29, 2006, compared with a Q2 2006 net loss of $4.2 million, or 36 cents per share. Net
sales totaling $59 million were $8 million lower than the year-earlier quarterly sales of $67
million.

For the first six months of fiscal 2007, sales totaled $121.6 million, compared with $129.3
million for the first half of 2006; and net income totaled $946,000, or 8 cents per diluted share,
compared with a loss of $8.1 million, or 70 cents per share, for the same year-earlier period.

“We are pleased with our solid execution during a challenging period for the retail home
furnishing industry,” said Robert G. Culp III, chairman and CEO, Culp Inc. “While our top line
results reflect the furniture industry slowdown and related inventory correction, we continued to
make progress in improving our operating performance in both mattress ticking and upholstery
fabrics. The changes we have made in each of our operating segments have enabled us to operate more
efficiently, even on lower volumes.”

In the mattress ticking segment, the company reported lower sales, reflecting reduced demand
for printed ticking, although knitted ticking sales continued a growth trend that is expected to
endure. Total Q2 sales were $23.5 million, compared with $24 million for the year-earlier period.

Upholstery fabric sales declined from $43 million in Q2 2006 to $35.5 million in the most
recent quarter. While US-produced fabric sales dropped 51 percent to $14.9 million, non-US-produced
fabric sales grew by 65 percent to $20.6 million. Continuing weakness in the US-produced upholstery
fabric segment has led the company to reduce its domestic employee base to 320 people at the end of
Q2 2007 from 534 at the end of fiscal 2006 and 1,484 at the end of fiscal 2005, Culp noted.

“In light of the continuing sharp declines in demand for US-produced fabrics, we will
continue to evaluate our domestic strategy and production requirements,” he said. “We remain
committed to taking whatever additional steps are necessary to achieve profitable US upholstery
fabric operations, and the company could take additional restructuring actions in the near future.”



December 12, 2006


World Class Ideas In Fashion And Retail

Mumbai, India/Princeton, N.J. — The
IMAGES Multimedia Group announces the 2007 edition of Images Fashion Forum (IFF) in India. This
event attracts fashion brands and retailers from across the globe besides investors, real estate
developers, IT systems logistical support and store designers to fashion the future of retail in
the Indian sub-continent and the Middle East.

The magnum opus of Indian fashion business, IFF, is scheduled for January 23-24, 2007, at
the fabulous Renaissance Hotel in the business capital of India — Mumbai.

More than 2,000 captains of the fashion retail world are participating in various events of
IFF like Asia Shop, Spring Board, Franchise Expo, The Future Shop, L Cube, Retail Access, Fashion
Theater, and The Evening of Fashion Titans. The Forum culminates in the Lycra® Images Fashion
Awards, with more than 20 presentations in an “Academy Awards” type atmosphere —- a
not-to-be-missed gala!

Established in 1992, IMAGES Multimedia Group has played a vital role in organizing the
fashion and retail businesses in India, and has successfully set up an information exchange via
media that equips the trade with the knowledge that drives the fashion and retail businesses across
the globe. Establishing a continuous flow of information through its activities facilitating
networking amongst investors, retailers, and brand leaders, IMAGES has emerged as the most vibrant
link between the marketers and the marketplace.

For more information, log on to www.imagesfashionforum.com, or call WDA BrandMarketing at
908-281-3833

Release courtesy of WDA BrandMarketing

December 12, 2006

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