Matsui Introduces Binder For Indigo-Dyed Denim

Gardena, Calif.-based Matsui
International Co. Inc. has introduced Binder 801/Printgen 801 — a two-component binder for
discharging indigo-dyed denim.

According to the company, previous products use sodium hypochlorite to discharge dyes from
the fabric, sometimes causing stability problems that lead to varied effectiveness of the discharge
process. Matsui reports the new binder is more stable and performs well in various curing
procedures, resulting in excellent discharged product.

November/December 2005

Textile Production Shows Increase

A federal government report that
shows an increase in textile production over the past six months gives some signs of hope for the
beleaguered US textile industry. The Federal Reserve’s Industrial Output report in October shows
that US textile production has increased by 2.4 percent in the past six months. Apparel production,
which showed a similar gain of 2 percent, was the strongest since June of 1994.

While saying a number of market considerations contributed to the improvement, officials of
the American Manufacturing Trade Action Coalition (AMTAC) attributed much of the improvement to the
imposition of new quotas in imports of Chinese textiles and apparel. AMTAC Executive Director
Auggie Tantillo said, “While there are certainly other market factors at play, these increases
suggest that the safeguard quota cases approved by the US government earlier this year and the
finalization of an agreement to limit the growth of US textile and apparel imports from China have
had a positive effect on the US textile industry.

Despite the recent improvements, this has not been a good year for US textile manufacturers.
In the first six months of this year, the industry lost 26,000 jobs, and more than 20 plants were
shuttered and imports from all sources have risen to more than 38 billion square meter equivalents
– an increase of nearly 9 percent over 2004 at this time.

November 2005

November-December 2005


Gerber Technology, Tolland, Conn., has named

Nick D’Alfonso
account executive, New England.

Bill Ditto
has joined the company’s Los Angeles (LA) sales team, with responsibility for industrial
markets in California and Nevada, and all markets in Arizona.

Tonya Randall
also has joined the company’s LA sales team, with responsibility for the apparel market
in the southern and eastern areas of the LA Basin, and San Francisco and Hawaii.

Ten Cate Industrial Fabrics, Pendergrass, Ga., has appointed

Dan Garrett
market manager, filtration.

garrett

Garrett

Germany-based
Triumph International recently awarded the Triumph Fashion Award 2005 to

Rafael Gomes
.

Nordson Corp.,Westlake, Ohio, has appointed

Jeff Pembroke
vice president, sales and marketing, of its Finishing and Coating businesses.

Kellwood Co., St. Louis, has named

Fran Boland
president, sales and marketing; and

Nisa Mellin
senior vice president, design, Sag Harbor. The company also has elected

Ben B. Blount Jr.
to its Board of Directors.

Shaw Living, Dalton, Ga., has promoted

Jim Curtin
to vice president, sales.

Linde Material Handling North America Corp., Summerville, S.C., has appointed

Rich Bevington
regional sales manager, North Central region, United States.

Mike Paul
, regional sales manager, Northeast, United States, also will assume responsibility for
central and eastern Canada.


Jake Jacobs
has joined
Spyder Active Sports Inc., Boulder, Colo., as president and COO.

jacobs_Copy

Jacobs

WestPoint Home Inc., West Point, Ga., and New York City, has appointed

Joseph Pennacchio
CEO and

Jeff R. Engel
COO.

New York City-based
F. Schumacher & Co. has appointed

Daniel J. Bonini
president and general manager of the newly created Waverly Lifestyle/ FSC division.

Techmer PM LLC, Clinton, Tenn., has named

Kenneth E. Jacobson
vice president and general manager of the Fibers business unit.



Randall L. Byrd
has joined Manchester, Conn.-based
Lydall Inc. as president of its North American automotive business.

US Secretary of Commerce

Carlos M. Gutierrez
has appointed

Wanda Ellis
, executive director, American Floorcovering Alliance Inc., a member of the Exporters’
Textile Advisory Committee.

ellis

Ellis

Adhesives Research Inc., Glen Rock, Pa., has named

Jeff Robertson
director and general manager, ARmark™ Authentication Technologies.

robertson

Robertson

Tandus, Dalton, Ga., has appointed

Suzanne Tick
design director and

Terry Mowers
creative director.

Koch Membrane Systems Inc. Wilmington, Mass., has appointed

Paul Bushey
product manager, replacement parts.

Flowserve Corp., Irving, Texas, has named

Lewis M. Kling
president and CEO, as well as a member of the board.

kling

Kling

The
Dow Chemical Co., Midland, Mich., has named

Geoffery E. Merszei
CFO.

Fire-Dex Inc., Medina, Ohio, has named

Steve Bonamer
national sales and marketing manager.


Steve Mariconti
has joined
Daikin America Inc., Orangeburg, N.Y., as technical service and applications
development manager, DAI-EL™ high-performance fluoroelastomers.

Innovo Group Inc., Los Angeles, has named

Elena Pickett
vice president, sales.

Wacker Chemical Corp., Adrian, Mich., has promoted

Debbie Gentry
to site manager, Kelmar Division.

Avondale Mills Inc., Monroe, Ga., has named

Gregory N. Scoggins
director, quality assurance; and

Yates W. Bostic Jr.
director, product development, piece-dyes.

Nilit Ltd., Israel, has named

Donna Hill
merchandising and sales manager, Nilit America Corp.

November/December 2005

Roger Gilmartin To Acquire Covington Industries

Roger Gilmartin, executive vice
president and COO, Covington Industries Inc., New York City, has reached an agreement with the
Gilmore family for the acquisition of the assets of Covington under a letter of intent executed on
October 18. Abby Gilmore, chairman and CEO, Covington Industries, announced the transaction as the
culmination of the Gilmore family’s expectation when Gilmartin joined Covington in 1996 that he
would serve as president of the company in the transition from the Gilmore family ownership. The
Gilmore family will continue to have an interest in Covington and Abby Gilmore will continue to
serve the company in an advisory capacity. Covington is scheduled to move to new office space in
the Midtown South area by year-end and it is expected that the transaction will close prior to the
move.

Abby Gilmore offered her congratulations to Gilmartin, adding: “It is bittersweet for the
Gilmore family to begin our exit from the company that our father, Benjamin Gilmore, founded 65
years ago, but we are thrilled that Roger will be leading the Covington team in the future. We are
confident that under Roger’s leadership, and with our management team and our excellent and
dedicated staff, the company will continue to serve its customers as a leader in the industry.”

Roger Gilmartin stated that “We are thrilled with the new prospects that further investment
will bring to the business. The management team is set to hit the ground running as we move to new
office space and begin a new era for Covington. We want to thank the Gilmore family for the
confidence they have shown in us and for their vision for Covington’s future in the home textiles
industry.”



Press Release Courtesy of Covington
Industries

November 2005

Crailar Fiber Technologies To Begin Trials On Advanced Natural Fiber

Vancouver-based Hemptown Clothing
Inc. has announced it will invest $1.3 million in recently acquired financing in its subsidiary
Crailar Fiber Technologies Inc., which will use the assets to commence trials on its
Crailar™ advanced natural fiber.

Crailar fiber is the result of a collaboration Hemptown entered into last year with the
National Research Council of Canada to develop of an enzyme that can unlock the economic potential
of industrial hemp fiber as a cost-competitive alternative to cotton.

Crailar is being developed as an eco-friendly fiber destined for a range of commercial
fabric applications because of its strength, flexibility and softness. The company is currently
working on licensing agreements to bring these fabrics to market.

“We have produced some very exciting results in the laboratory recently, and will now
produce large amounts of Crailar fiber, which will be tested as spun fiber for textiles, as well as
shorter fiber for use in advanced natural composite materials,” said Jerry Kroll, CEO, Hemptown. “
It is now possible for us to run these pilot plant quantities of Crailar for these tests, and
potentially even some low volume production runs in Canada and elsewhere to being cash flow on
fiber.”

November 2005

Culp Partners With Synthetics Finishing

Culp Inc., High Point, N.C., will
outsource its finishing services for its domestically-produced decorative upholstery fabrics to
Hickory, N.C.-based Synthetics Finishing, a division of North Wales, Pa.-based TSG Inc.
Additionally, the companies will collaborate on research and product development.

As a result, Culp will close its Burlington, N.C.-based finishing plant and lay off
approximately 100 workers. The company expects to complete this transition in January 2006. Culp
will have three remaining US upholstery fabrics manufacturing facilities and a growing operation in
China.

“As the global marketplace continues to evolve, we are transitioning Culp’s business model
to one that is more agile and less capital-intensive,” said Robert G. Culp III, chairman and CEO.

November/December 2005

Celanese Sells Acetate Manufacturing Site

Dallas-based Celanese Corp. has sold
its Rock Hill, S.C., Celanese Acetate manufacturing facility to Greens of Rock Hill LLC. The sale
is part of the company’s plan to consolidate its acetate flake manufacturing operations.

November 2005

China’s Import Growth Continues

US government trade data measured in
square meter equivalents through three quarters of this year show that China is continuing and
increasing its toehold on the US textile and apparel market while traditional suppliers such as
Canada and Mexico are losing out. Data through September show China has increased its exports by 46
percent and has a 31-percent market share. India showed a major increase of 20 percent in that
period, and imports from Pakistan were up by 8 percent. At the same time, Canadian imports were off
by 8 percent and Mexican imports were down by 6 percent. Imports from South Korea and Taiwan also
were off by 14 percent and 19 percent respectively, while imports from the Caribbean and Central
America nations showed only small increases. Total textile and apparel imports from all sources
increased by 8 percent over the three quarters of 2004 to 38,328,800 square meter equivalents.

November 2005

US And China Reach Agreement On Textile Imports

The US and Chinese governments have
reached a new bilateral textile trade agreement that has won the enthusiastic support of textile
state members of Congress, US textile manufacturers and even importers who see it as the lesser of
two evils.

The three-year pact, running until the end of 2008, places 34 categories of textiles and
apparel under quota control with growth levels only about 3.8-percent higher than if they were
placed under quotas using the tedious and unpredictable safeguard mechanism the US government has
employed to control a surge in Chinese imports. The new quotas, which go into effect January 1,
2006, cover 14 particularly sensitive product categories that have been under quota this year as a
result of safeguard actions. These include cotton and man-made fiber trousers, cotton and man-made
fiber knit shirts, underwear, woven shirts and brassieres. In addition, the new quotas will be
applied to 20 product categories where safeguard petitions are under consideration including socks,
sweaters, swimwear, knit fabric, wool suits, wool trousers, ramie trousers, sewing thread, combed
cotton yarn, cotton towels, polyester, filament fabric, man-made filament fabric, fiberglass
fabric, textile blinds and industrial fabrics. The new agreement would also allow the textile
industry to file petitions for additional safeguard petitions should the need arise.

Rep. Robin Hayes, one of the textile state congressmen who put pressure on the Bush
administration to come up with a good agreement, said, “I am proud to say that our government
signed a deal with the Chinese that will allow our manufacturers to operate in a climate that is
better than existed previously.” He warned, however, this agreement “is not the end of our efforts
by a long shot.” He said the next step is to ensure that the US Customs service strictly enforces
the agreement, and he added that something must be done to correct the Chinese currency imbalance
that textile manufacturers say is an unfair subsidy for their imports. Although Hayes was persona
non grata with some textile manufacturers because of his support for the Dominican Republic-Central
American Free Trade Agreement, textile lobbyists at a Capitol Hill news conference heaped praise on
Hayes for his work on the Chinese agreement, saying Hayes was instrumental in “placing the Chinese
issue squarely on the administration’s radar.”

Jim Chesnutt, chairman of the National Council of Textile Organizations (NCTO), said: “Under
this agreement, the US textile industry will know with certainty that China will not be able to
flood the US market during the next three years. It will not have to rely on an uncertain safeguard
process that would have required dozens of cases to be filed each year with no guarantees on the
outcome of each of the cases.” Like Congressman Hayes, Chesnutt pointed out the threat from China
is not eliminated by this agreement, but “only delayed.” He said China continues to subsidize its
textile and apparel industry, manipulates its currency and employs “multiple unfair trade
practices.”

Although textile and apparel importers do not like any kind of quotas, they see the new pact
as an improvement over the safeguard process, which has resulted in considerable uncertainty
surrounding their overseas sourcing.

Kevin Burke, CEO of the American Apparel & Footwear Association, said that while his
organization could never support quotas, “this agreement is far more preferable to the disruptive
safeguard regime we had previously endured.” He urged the US government to publish details defining
the thresholds the textile industry will have to overcome in order to justify further safeguard
petitions. He also called in the Chinese government to put in place a “transparent and
cost-effective allocation system” so companies can make fair and efficient use of the quotas.

Eric Autor, the National Retail Federation’s trade expert, echoed those sentiments.“The
repeated imposition of safeguards and the lack of any effective monitoring or allocation system
have created an unacceptable level of unpredictability for retailers trying to do business with
China,” he said. He argues that safeguard quotas were approved for “ political reasons” without
regard for the adverse impact on retailers and consumers. He contends that safeguards drive up the
cost of clothing without helping to create or protect US jobs, saying that most of the products are
no longer manufactured in the U.S. at competitive prices or in commercial quantities.

Following is a list of the products (by Customs classification) that will be covered by the
new quotas —

Baby Socks (239 p)

Socks (332/432/632p)

Cotton Knit Shirts (338/339)

Woven Shirts Men’s and Boys’ (340/640)

Sweaters (345p/645p/646p)

Cotton Trousers (347/348)

Brassieres (349/649)

Underwear (352/652)

Swimwear (359-s/659s)

Wool Suits (443)

Wool Trousers (447)

Man-made Fiber Knit Shirts (638/639)

Man-made Fiber Trousers (647p/648p)

Silk/vegetable Fiber Trousers (847)

Home Furnishings Textiles

Thread ((200)

Knit Fabric (222)

Special Purpose Fabric (229)

Combed Cotton Yarn (301)

Cotton Towels (363)

Polyester Filament Fabric (619)

Synthetic Filament Fabric (620)

Glass Fiber Fabric (622)+

Blinds (666p)



November 2005

Schlafhorst Adds DREF® To Product Range

Germany-based Schlafhorst, a
subsidiary of Germany-based Saurer GmbH & Co. KG, has added DREF® friction-spinning machinery
to its range of spinning and winding products. Integration of the DREF technology into Schlafhorst’s
product offerings is a result of the acquisition earlier this year of Austria-based Dr. Ernst
Fehrer AG, developer of the technology, by Germany-based Neumag, Saurer’s nonwovens machinery
subsidiary
(See “
Nonwovens/Technical
Textiles News
,”
TW, July/August 2005)
.

The DREF technology, which will be available through both Schlafhorst and Fehrer, opens up
new technical and specialty niche markets for Schlafhorst. The machines include the DREF 2000
system for coarse yarns and the DREF 3000 system for multicomponent yarns.

November 2005

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