New Carpet Design Features Now Available On Alpha 360

The Alpha 360 double carpet weaving machine from Germany-based Schonherr Textilmaschinenbau GmbH, a
member of the Stli Group, now is capable of producing high-pile carpets of wool, acrylic,
polypropylene or blended yarns in up to eight pile colors and with a pile height of up to 30
millimeters per carpet.

Suggested application areas include bedroom, bathroom and area rugs; long-pile shaggy rugs;
and imitation animal fur rugs; among others.The carpets are reversible; and can be produced with
2×4 pile, and with different designs on top and bottom.

June 2005

NYC Art Project Uses Fabric Woven On Dornier Machines

The Gates, a temporary art installation by renowned artists Christo and Jean-Claude, was set up in
New York City’s Central Park earlier this year. The piece consisted of 7,503 rectangular
saffron-colored recyclable nylon fabric panel-covered arches installed in long rows over walkways
and footpaths.

The panels were woven on a 360-centimeter-wide PTV-type weaving machine from Germany-based
Lindauer Dornier GmbH. The PTV model was the only machine capable of producing the panels because
it features rigid rapiers and positively controlled center transfer, which reliably produces such
high-strength fabrics, according to Dornier.

J. Schilgen GmbH and Co. KG, a Germany-based developer and producer of technical fabrics, and
processor of natural and man-made yarns, delivered the panels.

The project remained in the park for 16 days. After its removal, the materials, including
116,389 miles of nylon thread woven into 1,067,330 square feet of fabric, were recycled.

June 2005

Fibreguide Offers FG5 Jet For Draw Texturing Air Covering

Fibreguide, an England-based manufacturer of jets used in a range of fiber production
processes, has introduced the FG5 jet for draw-texturing and air-covering applications. According
to the company, the FG5 available in tungsten carbide or high-quality ceramic models features
improved durability and jet cores that are easily removed for cleaning or changing.


fg5


Fibreguide’s FG5 jet for draw-texturing and air-covering applications



June 2005

Linz Textil Uses Rieter R40 To Develop Viscoblend Yarn

YarnLinz Textil GmbH, an Austria-based manufacturer of cellulosic yarn, has introduced Viscoblend®
viscose yarn an open-end rotor-spun yarn produced using Switzerland-based Rieter Textile Systems
R40 spinning machine and made with viscose fiber from Austria-based Lenzing AG. Linz Textil reports
technical parameters for the new yarn also required further development of spinning components.

According to the company, Viscoblend features improved strength and elongation, increased
evenness, and reduced imperfections. It is available in soft, medio and special qualities. Spinning
capabilities up to a yarn count of Nm 80/1 (Ne 47/1) present other possibilities for an expanded
range of offerings.

June 2005

BYK-Chemie Extends Line With New Products

BYK-Chemie GmbH, Germany, has added 12 new products to its line of additives used in the inks,
coatings and plastics industries.The new offerings include: DISPERBYK®-145 wetting and dispersing
additive; BYK®-425 rheological additive with improved properties; new products in the companys
NANOBYK nanotechnology-based series; and additives for aqueous systems such as DISPERBYK-194
wetting and dispersing additive for aqueous 2K-PU and epoxy systems.

June 2005

The Many Shades Of Sunbrella


W
ith its launch in 1960, Sunbrella® branded fabrics established a presence few fabric
products have ever achieved. “It is a branded approach that is unique for the textile industry – as
people think of textiles,” said Steve Ellington, president, Glen Raven Custom Fabrics LLC.

In an industry with many fiber brands that pull through to consumer and home furnishings
brands largely fashion-branded through design houses, few performance fabric brands continue to
garner recognition such as that established and supported by Glen Raven Custom Fabrics, one of two
subsidiaries within Glen Raven Inc. Whether in awning, marine, automotive convertible top,
residential or casual furniture markets, Sunbrella continues to meet the challenge of a demanding
marketplace by blending performance, style and value while escaping commoditization.

sunbrellaopen
Although Sunbrella® fabric was launched 45 years ago, the product maintains exceptional
brand awareness, and continues to attract new customers and find new markets and
applications.


Custom Fabrics


“I came through the sales and marketing side of the business,”  Ellington said. “I think
you learn very quickly that, to the consumer, it is not about having the nicest, most
technologically advanced manufacturing facility. That can be one part of it, but if you don’t have
a product that the consumer wants, one that is providing value, one that in some way enhances their
life, what benefit is there to what you are doing?”

Glen Raven spends a great deal of time and applies many resources to understand consumer
value.

“For the person who owns a boat,” Ellington continued, “the fabric that is on the interior or
exterior cushions – that’s fashion, that’s the product that enhances his or her enjoyment. To see a
BMW convertible ride by on the road – that top is something we manufacture –  to have your
product as part of that package is value provided to the consumer.”

Fashion is just part of the story. The Custom Fabrics subsidiary is responsible for the
Sunbrella brand. Glen Raven’s France-based Dickson S.A. subsidiary is a dominant international
supplier. Dickson is known worldwide in the awning and marine markets. The business has established
brands such as Banguard, a durable outdoor banner fabric; and Nitelite, a fabric specifically
designed for back-lit awning and sign applications.

Custom Fabrics continues to innovate with Glen Raven Media Fabric, a unit that serves
specialized graphics printing businesses by providing fabrics that enhance printed graphics.
Sunbrella Graphics Systems, another Custom Fabrics unit, offers Sunbrella fabrics and a system
partnered with 3M Corp., St. Paul, Minn., to create the industry’s first warranty-backed graphics
system. The system allows contractors to create consistent, repeatable multicolor graphics that fix
3M graphic film and Sunbrella fabrics through a durable bonding system.

sunbrellateam
Custom Fabrics design team members (left to right): Anderson Hicks; Claire Madera; Sara
Hall; Greg Voorhis; Gina Wicker; Amy Rochester; and Nicole Ziecik. Not pictured:  Jenifer
Borg


The Customer’s Customer


In many of the industries served by Sunbrella branded products, the  Custom Fabrics
subsidiary’s marketing and merchandisers’ efforts create value for contractors, architects and
specifiers.

In a recent drive into high-end casual home applications, the company has had the benefit of
easy care, durability and sophisticated style and design demanded by the jobber market.

“It really creates a lifestyle,” Ellington said. “There is value in being associated with
Sunbrella.” Recent Calico Corners catalogues illustrate the breadth of branding Sunbrella has
achieved, sharing pages with well-known lifestyle brands such as Ralph Lauren Polo home interior
fabrics.

“The consumer is very sophisticated,” Ellington continued. “They are plugged into fabrics now
in terms of what performance or benefit the product provides, whether it is in sports apparel or
for boating, awnings or interiors.”

And more performance is on the horizon. “Ultraviolet protection enhancement is an area you
will see us push more in terms of value to the consumer,” he said.

June 2005

Carolina Cotton Works Investing For Opportunity

In an industry increasingly challenged by overseas competition, growing companies continually adapt to take advantage of available business opportunities. Smaller companies focused on innovation and shorter production runs — and not hindered by size and a low-cost producer mentality — oftentimes can respond to challenges more quickly than can a larger firm. One such small, adaptive, family-owned business is Gaffney, S.C.-based Carolina Cotton Works Inc. (CCW).

After 10 successful years in business, the company recently had cause to celebrate not only
its anniversary, but also a plant expansion, which has added both capacity and flexibility
(See sidebar below).

“I believe there is a place for a modest-sized company that understands the importance of the customer and won’t say ‘no,'” said Page Ashby, president. “We ask only for an opportunity to build a new business relationship, and we promise to respond in a fair and honorable way.”

ccwmen
Left to right: Stacey Bridges, sales/technical manager; Bryan Ashby, CFO; Hunter Ashby, plant superintendent; and Page Ashby, president, Carolina Cotton Works Inc.

CCW Opens For Business

In 1994, Ashby and longtime friend Joe Gaino — Milliken veteran and owner of Garment
Technology Inc. — talked at dinner about the possibility of starting a textile company. Ashby was a veteran of the industry, most recently as an executive with Sara Lee, and often had toyed with the idea of owning a company. But it wasn’t until that fateful evening that the possibility became a reality. Gaino and Ashby spent the next several weeks developing a business plan centered on garment dyeing as the main plant operation. Ashby quickly convinced his two sons to jump on board — Hunter Ashby as plant superintendent and Bryan Ashby as CFO. Gaino became a passive shareholder in the company — a role he still maintains today.

CCW opened its doors for business in March 1995, with an investment in all-new equipment for garment dyeing, and continuous bleaching and scouring. Business was great for the first six months, but it soon became clear that demand for garment-dyeing services was dwindling. In order to change the company’s direction, Page Ashby headed back to the bank to discuss additional financing.

“Obviously, the bank wasn’t too happy to learn that I needed further financing so quickly,” he said, “but I was able to borrow enough to purchase one piece-dyeing machine.” Since then, the company has continued to invest in one new piece-dyeing machine every year.

Sales now are triple those of CCW’s first year in business – a statistic attributed in part
to continual investment and a team of dedicated employees.

“Some people ask how we manage to stay in business under such tough conditions in the United States,” said Hunter Ashby. “You could say it’s luck or the best equipment, but we couldn’t operate without our dedicated employees and management staff.”

Technical Flexibility

Today, CCW offers a variety of tubular knitted fabric products and services. The company’s
reputation for high white consistency starts with the Jemco III CBR2000 continuous bleaching range. CCW worked with its chemical suppliers to develop a bleach system, which it uses in conjunction with the Jemco range to produce optimal whiteness on knitted fabrics. Whiteness on both the CIE and Hunter scales is monitored during the bleaching cycle to ensure quality and consistency.

Scholl RapidFlex Jets enable the company to offer efficient and consistent cotton and
cotton-blend piece dyeing to its customers. Delicate fabrics are dyed using new machines from Fong’s National Engineering Co.

Relaxed drying and shrinkage control is performed using a Santex Jumbo Santashrink dryer. The dryer provides unsurpassed results in shrinkage and punch weight control, according to Page Ashby. Typically, the dryer reduces shrinkage 5 to 15 percent — resulting in reduced stress on the cloth, which translates into less chatter and torque and other finishing-related problems.

CCW uses Tubetex Pak-Nit II and Delta-Plus compactors to provide width, weight and shrinkage control on circular jersey, fleece, rib, piqué and interlock knits. The company selected the RFG Napper to produce brushed and napped fabrics. The machine’s microprocessor can store machine settings for various fabric style numbers to ensure a consistent nap depth from product run to product run.

The company specializes in dyeing and finishing the following fabrics:

  • underwear and outerwear jersey;
  • 30-inch and body-size 1×1 and 2×1 ribs, needle-out ribs and flat-back ribs, knitted using 14- and 18-cut machines;
  • two-end and three-end fleece;
  • body-size piqué and interlock fabrics; and
  • raschel and tuck-stitch thermals.

Typical products include 100-percent cotton, cotton-blend or 100-percent polyester fabrics
made with combed or carded, open-end, air-jet or ring-spun yarns — but business is growing for man-made fabrics used in performance sportswear and underwear.

CCW prefers to provide contract dyeing and finishing services to customers; but it also
offers knit-and-finish packages, and even will sell finished knitted fabrics at the customer’s
request.

Recognizing the difficulty in operating knitting machines to accommodate the broad range of fabric styles requested by the customer, CCW elected not to become a knitter and instead developed strong relationships with contract knitters and yarn manufacturers. Customers range from apparel manufacturers running 60,000 lbs of fabric per week to smaller facilities running 2,000 lbs per month.

Business Development

“We can’t sit in Gaffney and wait for business to come to us,” said Page Ashby. “Our
sales/technical manager, Stacey Bridges, has been instrumental in establishing an identity for the company both in the United States and internationally.”

Bridges understood the importance of attending trade shows, and joining apparel-related
organizations and trade associations to develop new contacts and establish relationships with people throughout the supply chain.

“Compared to other small textile companies, we have very aggressive sales techniques,”
Bridges explained. “Associations such as the American Apparel Producers’ Network allow me to establish relationships with people in different regions, and have allowed CCW to increase its business levels with companies in the Caribbean Basin and Andean regions.”

“We also joined SEAMS [The National Association for the Sewn Products Industry] to help us find domestic customers and sales for state and federal bids.”


Looking Forward

“No doubt, keeping the business profitable is more and more difficult,” Page Ashby said. “But we intend to adapt as the marketplace demands.”

Recognizing the dedication of CCW’s employees, Ashby attributes the company’s success over the past 10 years to its flexibility and its willingness to welcome change and to adapt as business conditions dictate.

“I like to remind myself not to get too comfortable with the way things are because tomorrow they’re going to change,” he said.

“We’re not perfect, but I guarantee the company is never satisfied, and we’re constantly
examining ways to improve what we do.”



Investment, Expansion Pays Off

Always looking for new business possibilities, Page Ashby realized that while tubular fabrics
have been CCW’s bread and butter for 10 years, adding open-width finishing capabilities would allow the company to offer fabrics for fitted knitted garments and also allow it to enter new markets.

“I’m very excited about processing new fabrics,” Ashby said. “Knitted fabrics will continue
for now as our core business, but the new equipment allows us to explore new markets, such as woven home furnishings fabrics and medical fabrics.”

According to Stacey Bridges, sales/technical manager, the company already has found customers among knitted mattress ticking producers that are interested in the company’s new finishing capabilities.

CCW selected three machines for the expansion — a knitted goods slitter specially designed
and built by Switzerland-based Strahm Textile Systems AG, a tenter frame from Brazil-based Texima S.A. and an open-width compactor also from Strahm.

ccwmachine1
ccwmachine2
CCW recently added open-width finishing capability with the installation of a compactor from Strahm (top) and a tenter frame from Texima. 

“The Strahm compactor is one of only two in the world,” Ashby said. The machine offers the latest in compactor technology and operates at speeds of up to 45 meters per minute.The Texima tenter has two pads installed at the beginning of the line to provide wet-on-wet finishing. Using its six heating zones, the machine can be adjusted for the desired finished fabric weight. Maximum processing width is 110 inches, which is fairly unique to the industry, according to Ashby.

The expansion involved extending the roof and moving the wall to add 16,000 square feet to the facility to accommodate the new equipment. CCW processes 350,000 pounds (lbs) of fabric per week, and the expansion adds another 50,000 lbs of capacity. The company hopes the expansion will increase its sales figures by 25 to 30 percent going forward.

To celebrate the recent grand opening of its new open-width finishing expansion, CCW invited its customers, friends and employees to a ribbon-cutting ceremony. Activities included plant tours and a luncheon, during which CCW recognized all 10-year employees.

Kim Henceman, DyStar sales representative, said he was very excited to see a great family
business doing so well. “I’m a South Carolinian, and today is a great day for the state as well as the textile industry in the United States,” Henceman said at the opening.


June 2005

Retailers Voice Strong Support For Central American Pact

Claiming that the Dominican Republic-Central American Free Trade Agreement (DR-CAFTA) will help US
and regional textile and apparel manufacturers adjust to the new competitive environment of the
post-quota world, the head of the National Retail Federation (NRF) is urging the US Trade
Representative and Congress to move swiftly and approve the agreement. Under procedures for trade
agreements, the USTR must submit specific language implementing the agreement that must be voted up
or down and cannot be amended by Congress. The Senate Finance Committee is expected to meet June 14
to work out details of implementing legislation, and the House Ways and Means Committee is expected
to do the same shortly thereafter. Tracy Mullin, president of the National Retail Federation, said
the Central American agreement will help reduce prices for US consumers and create opportunities
for US retailers to open stores in the Dominican Republic and Central America. She said it also
will help build partnerships between US and regional textile and apparel manufacturers.She said the
pact would help eliminate some problems retailers see with the strict textile rules of origin now
in effect in much of the area. An NRF statement noted that under current trade law, apparel from
the region can qualify for duty-free treatment to the United States only if it is made of US fabric
woven from US yarn. DR-CAFTA would expand duty-free treatment to cover a wider range of products
and would allow those products to be made of fabric produced in the region along with fabric from
Canada and Mexico.



June 2005

June 2005

Gerber Technology, Tolland, Conn., has named

Holly Beum
director of software product management.

holly

Beum

Kellwood Co., St. Louis, has appointed

Scott D. Felder
president, Kellwood Menswear; and

Paul A. Robb
CEO, Sag Harbor.

Wolverine World Wide Inc., Rockford, Mich., has appointed

Shirley D. Peterson
to its Board of Directors.

Li & Fung USA, New York City, has named

Robert P. Fleischer
vice president, merchandising, Royal Velvet brand.

New York City-based
Warnaco Group Inc. has appointed

Dwight Meyer
president, Global Sourcing.

Piedmont Logistics, Gainesville, Ga., has made the following appointments:

David Dubose
, operations manager;

Jessica Rouleau
, translator, data entry and accounting assistant; and

Michael Weismantel
, team leader, recruiter and marketing consultant.

Germany-based
Lanxess AG has appointed

Rolf Stomberg
chairman and

Ralf Deitz
vice chairman of its Supervisory Board.

Fort Worth, Texas-based
Resin Technology Inc. has named

John Denzer
managing partner.

denzer

Denzer


Rick Embry
has joined
Precision Roll Grinders, Allentown, Pa., as account manager, Tennessee, Alabama
and Mississippi.

The
American Association of Textile Chemists and Colorists, Research Triangle Park,
N.C., has announced the winners of the 2005 Concept 2 Consumer Design Competition:

Melissa Popovich
, Bowling Green University, first place, technical design;

Connie Chen
, Cornell University, second place, technical design;

Clarisse Sjoquist
, Kansas State University, first place, aesthetic design;

Joe Hynek
, Iowa State University, second place, aesthetic design;

Shameron Eggers
and

Ana Forillo
, Dominican University, first place, textile design; and

Jessica Weisen
and

Enid Williams
, University of Wisconsin-Madison, second place, textile design.

Wilmington, Del.-based
DuPont’s Bio-Based Materials business has appointed

Dawson Winch
product and marketing manager for DuPont™ Sorona®.

dawson

Winch


SATO Corp., Tokyo, has named

Sebastiano Stella
country manager, Italy.

Rock Hill, S.C.-based
Springs Industries Inc. has named

Tommy “Louie” Rutledge
its Rewards and Recognition Corporate Associate of the Year.

louie

Rutledge

At the
International Wool Textile Organization (IWTO) Annual Congress, the Brussels-based
IWTO awarded the first World Wool Awards to:

Hannah Shaddick
— Fashion and Design;

Heinrich Oberrauch
— Marketing and Promotion; and

Deborah Loxam-Kohl
— Concept, Innovation and Extension.

Omnova Solutions Inc., Fairlawn, Ohio, has appointed

John Wei
vice president, Performance Chemicals Asia; and has promoted

Frank D. Nataro
to business director, Specialty Chemicals.

Avondale Mills Inc., Monroe, Ga., recently promoted

Marcus K. Tapley
to executive vice president, operations.

SML Maschinengesellschaft mbH, Austria, has appointed

Christian Malzner
chief representative in the SML Far East Regional Office.

The Cary, N.C.-based
Association of the Nonwoven Fabrics Industry has named

Gonzalo Castro
, Cardinal Health, and

David Ford
, BBA Fiberweb™, co-chairs of its International Trade Advisory Board.

At the recent 13th Annual
National Textile Center (NTC) Forum, Raleigh, N.C.-based NTC awarded Joe Cunning
Graduate Student Research Presentation Contest prizes to:

Marilyn Minus
, Georgia Tech, first place;

Dongyeon Lee
, Auburn University, second place; and

Ashish Garg
, Philadelphia University,

Dahlia Haynes
, Clemson University,

Shawn Hutchinson
, North Carolina State University,

Skander Limen
, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth,

Anne Sandstrom
, University of California Davis, and

Kuitian Tan
, Cornell University, third place.

June 2005

Freudenberg Debuts Several Air Filter Products

Germany-based Freudenberg Nonwovens Filtration Division, Hopkinsville, Ky., has introduced several
new automotive air filter products. MicronAir® cabin air filters clean particulates such as pollen,
dust and other allergens from air entering a vehicles HVAC system. Combination filters, new for
North America, feature an activated carbon layer to reduce odors, certain noxious gases and vapors,
and particulates from a vehicles interior. Automotive engine intake air filters made using INDEX
Award-winning nonwoven cartridges reduce noise, require less space, and offer longer life and
better filtration than traditional paper filters, the company reports.

June 2005

Sponsors