Inventa-Fischer Secures Order

Switzerland-based Inventa-Fischer AG, a member of the EMS-group, has secured an order from China.
The contract covers the design and supply of a plant to produce 200,000 tons of polyester chips per
year, using terephthalic acid and ethylene glycol as starting materials. The value of this contract
is approximately CHF 35 million.The plant will be operated by Shandong Zibo Universal New Materials
Co. Ltd. at Zibo, Shandong Province. Production is scheduled to begin at the end of 2001.

May 2001

A First Look At Fabrics For 2002

A First Look At Fabrics For 2002
European Preview exhibitors respond to demands of American market. For the second
time, European Preview presented a selection of quality fabrics to American designers and
manufacturers in New York City, prior to the Premiere Vision salon in Paris. Again, the reactions
of buyers and sellers was unanimous; it is an invaluable working tool.According to Daniel Faure,
chairman, Premiere Vision, the quality of exchange and collaboration initiated between Old World
exhibitors and North American buyers has enabled weavers to tailor their work more specifically to
the demands of the American market. There were 148 exhibitors from nine European countries at the
most recent show.As at Premiere Vision, European Preview is organized according to fabric type,
with producers of linens, knits, prints, silks, denims and sportswear fabrics divided into sectors.
For Spring/Summer 2002, there continues to be interest in linen, with a lot of variety in this
area. Some of the new linens are blended with other fibers. Many are washable, crease-resistant and
high-performance. Performance LinensAt the Belgian firm Libeco-Lagae, linen weaving has
increased 30 percent in the last year and is running at full capacity. Sales to the United States
are strong. Along with 100-percent linen, there are blends with silk, Tactel® nylon or modal.
Classic twills and herringbones, and yarn-dyed patterns are popular. A new Madras was pointed out.
There are delaves, aero finishes with a soft hand and wrinkle-resistant resin finishes. New are
pucker stretch yarn dyes and color-reverse bonded gauzes.Italian weaver Solbiati is showing
linen/cupro blends with a slick appearance and soft hand. There is glitter here with a touch of
nylon or metal, and there are high-twist crepe weaves in 100-percent linen or blends with viscose.
Stripes with relief surfaces, twills, sateens and burlap weaves are popular. There are washed
finishes and rubbery, coated fabrics for outerwear.Another Italian company, Linea Tessile Italiana,
sold here through Stacey Horne Textile, is printing on linen crepe gauze, sateen, wild silk/viscose
and linen/nylon blends. There are thick-and-thin woven stripes, metallic stripes and linen fabrics
embroidered with metal or straw. Elastic yarns embroidered on fabrics create puckered
stretch.Hauterives line was 30 percent ready. Early customer reactions will help in styling the
remainder of the line. Noteworthy new fabrics at this French firm include cloques with Lycra®
having the look of knitted fabrics. There are eyelash-striped jacquards, linen/copper reversible
gauzes and a double cloth with a pleated and knotted patterned face. Hauterive is available through
Chantal Fabrics in New York.For summer, many woolen mills switch to linen. Their lines generally
have a classic look. At de Cathalo, there are yarn-dyed stripes and checks, crushed linens and
crepes. Picchi has lightweight yarn dyes with comfort stretch, classic weaves with a touch of a
metallic yarn and Lycra, and blends of linen with Tencel®, viscose or nylon. At Milior, there are
denims and jacquards. Novelty DenimsVertical French denim producer Bonduel, available through
Nuvotex, is showing linen/cotton dyed and pigment-printed denims. Novelty denims in this line range
in weight and hand. There are shimmering stretch denims in cotton/Lurex®/Lycra, color-reverse,
double-faced denims, printed denims and abstract emerized patterns on denim.Milag, also represented
by Nuvotex, is showing quartz-printed stretch denims, as well as flock-patterned and glitter-coated
denims. Other fabrics have been styled for activewear and beachwear. There are quartz-printed
polyester/Lycra knits; acetate/nylon/elastane jacquards; and printed, pleated polyester voiles and
mesh.Gera Gallico, who heads up Billon Freres New York office, showed glitter-printed knitted
denim. There are metallic stripes, jacquards with pigtails and fish net in this line, and a large
selection of prints on nylon/ elastane for swimwear. Gallico said the major portion of the line
will be shown at Premiere Vision.Italian knitter Dondi is using cotton, silk and viscose for
summer. For activewear, there is a new cotton/silk knit with a chintz look. There are logo
jacquards, open-crochet knits and meshes. Stripes Are PopularIn the print sector, tropicals,
retro florals and diagonal stripes are the beginning of Miroglios line. Komar is showing camouflage
prints, wavy stripes, monotones and florals. Popular base cloths include stretch cotton, cotton
satin and viscose matte jersey. Oasis sells this line in New York. 

The British firm Liberty has several new print base cloths to complement their ever-popular
Tana lawn. There is cotton/Lycra jersey, a new linen weave and silk. According to Ed Harding of
Barn Hill, agent for Liberty, at $12 per meter, we are competitive in printed silk.Showing the
print line, Harding said, the range murmurs rather than shrieks Liberty. There are mixes of florals
and geometrics in vibrant colors, small conversationals, new paisleys, stripes and a play on
ginghams.Sedera is showing novelty stripes, geometrics and monotone stylized roses. Agent Ken
Kassover of Nuvotex said that crepes and georgettes are the best-selling base cloths. New for
spring is cotton stretch with a moving optic pattern. Double shantung is shown in solid shades and
jacquard patterns.Technea, which is part of the Groupe Chamatex, has been selling in the United
States for two years through European Fabric Resource. Fabric prices range from $3 to $7 per meter.
New for spring are light, blouse-weight fabrics woven with a new texturized polyester from Unifi
called Extensa, which has unique stretch and recover properties. Samples shown were woven in blends
with cotton or viscose and provide 20-percent stretch. Luxury SilksIn the silk sector, the
French company Bianchini Ferier is showing denim-look silk twill. There are no- repeat plaids in
acrylic/nylon/elastane blends that caught the eyes of buyers. Fitzsimmons Fabrics handles this line
in New York.Swiss silk weaver Weisbrod Zuerrer, handled here by Filtex International, is also into
luxe denim. It is shown with a soft hand, a touch of Lurex, and suggested for use with lace. The
line is both feminine and sporty, with a lot of glitter for evening, but not too flashy, said
Khaled Bouharrour, design and product manager.Weisbrod Zuerrer is showing very light and airy
dry-touch gauze, jacquards in feather patterns, tone-on-tone embroideries, stretch plisses, and a
group of fabrics described as elegant rustics. Some are woven of 100-percent silk; others are
blends of linen/nylon. There are a lot of stripes in bright summer colors.French silk weaver Bucol
is also into stripes for summer. Some are large and woven in tonal colors in silk taffeta. Other
summer taffetas have eyelash fringe. There are organzines with metallic clipped jacquard patterns
and bright warp prints.Frans Damide, president, Solstiss/Perrin USA, agent for Bucol, noted that
the revival of their coupe de velour au sabre is so successful that they are bringing back other
Old World techniques. The newest is water-repellent oxidized silk, which was developed by accident
in China two centuries ago.When China was invaded, silk weavers buried fabrics to prevent theft.
When the invaders left and Chinese silk weavers dug up their cloth, it was wet from recent floods.
They laid the silk on the ground to dry in sun- and moonlight. The fabric oxidized, resulting in
black cloth with a crisp, dry hand.Today Bucol is repeating this process on silk twill. The only
finishing process is burial in China, where minerals in the soil produce the desired black color
and fabric touch. Fabrics are sun- and moon-dried. They sell for about $50 per meter.The next
European Preview will take place in New York City in July.

May 2001

May 2001

National Nonwovens, Easthampton, Mass., has appointed
Mike Shaltry new business development manager. Shaltry’s responsibilities include
broadening the company’s exposure into new product areas, especially medical and industrial
nonwovens.

Naturally Knits Inc., Gastonia, N.C., named
Jim Magarahan vice president and general manager. The following people were
appointed team leaders:
Kathy St. Clair, converting;
Linda Wacaster, greige; and
Tammy Green, accounting and office management. In addition,
Janice Farinella and
Cheryl Romero have joined the sales group at Naturally Knits. Farinella will be
responsible for California, while Romero’s sales territory includes Eastern Canada and New England.

Acme-Hardesty Co., Blue Bell, Pa., named
Bob Malenchini regional sales manager for northern Illinois, northern Indiana,
Minnesota, Wisconsin, Iowa and Nebraska.

Malanchini_546
Malenchini

Stefan Kroß was invited to join the executive board of Germany-based
W. Schlafhorst AG & Co. Kroß was also appointed managing director of
Schlafhorst Winding Systems GmbH. He succeeds Gregor Rüth, who is leaving the
company.

James (Jim) Greene has been added to the sales team of
Batson Yarn and Fabrics Machinery Group Inc., Greenville, S.C., as area sales
manager.

Chuck Allen joins
BBA Nonwovens as a senior development scientist in the Hygiene Research and
Development Division, Simpsonville, S.C. Allen will develop nonwoven materials for feminine- care
applications and will work with the BBA Natural Fibers Group’s customers.

Alloy Polymers, Richmond, Va., has hired
Robert Humphreys to fill the newly created position of vice president of
operations.

Rutland Plastics Technologies, Pineville, N.C., has named
Danny Sweem, vice president of sales for the company’s screen print business.

Wardwell Braiding Machine Co., Central Falls, R.I., announced changes to its sales
and management team.
David Farnum has been appointed customer service manager, while
Bob Foisy has been promoted to aftermarket sales manager. In addition,
David Goodney has been appointed sales manager responsible for United States
operations.

W. Gilbert O’Neal has been elected president of the
Institute of Textile Technology, Charlottesville, Va. O’Neal served as executive
vice president and COO of the Institute for the past year. He will succeed
Robert A. Barnhardt.

Dawn Wyatt has recently been promoted to the position of corporate director,
technical services,
Duro Industries, Fall River, Mass.

Wyatt_547
Wyatt

Patrick Steverlynck is the new chairman of the Board of Directors for
Belgium-based
Picanol, while
Jan Coene has taken over as president and CEO of the company.

Houston-based
KoSa has announced the restructuring of its textile fibers businesses. Vice
President
Eduardo Rocha will continue to lead the new global textile fibers business.
Reporting to Rocha will be:
Marco Espinosa, general manager, global textile staple;
Ken Hardin, general manager, global textile filament;
Paul Latten, director, global sourcing;
Matt Schrantz, director, global research and development; and
Rodolfo Sequeyro, manager, global financial/business analysis.

Frank K. Hurd has joined the staff of the
Carpet and Rug Institute (CRI), Dalton, Ga., as vice president and director of
government relations. Hurd will help CRI move forward in the issue management and advocacy arenas.
Gary Kenworthy will continue with CRI in a part-time role.

Jockey International Inc., Kenosha, Wis., has appointed
Jamie Lockhard vice president, marketing and advertising. She will be responsible
for the development and execution of all advertising programs, as well as providing direction for
sales promotions and public relations.

Mark Vasconcellos has joined the sales team at
Hunter Associates Laboratory Inc., Reston, Va. Vasconcellos will represent North
and South Carolina, southern Virginia, eastern Tennessee and southeastern West Virginia.

The
Association of the Nonwoven Fabrics Industry (INDA), Cary, N.C., has named
Cosmo R. Camelio as its new technical director. Camelio has been involved in the
nonwovens and general textiles industry for 36 years. He comes to INDA from his most recent
position with Freudenberg Nonwovens LP, Durham, N.C.

May 2001

Federal Signal Launches Unistat LED Status Indicator

Using the latest LED technology, Federal Signal Corp., Electrical Products Group, University
Park, Ill., now offers a status indicator that adds the attention getting signal of a strobe light
to the utility of a stack light. The Unistat Status Indicator has four colors red, green, amber and
blue with four flash patterns steady-burn, slow flash, strobe flash and SimuStrobe.Unistat is rated
NEMA Type 4X and IP66, UL-listed CE-approved and CSA-pending. The indicator is available in
24VAC/DC and 120VAC operating voltages. Units are preassembled and ready for either surface mount
or 3/4-inch pipe mount.

May 2001

Honeywell Performance Fibers Expands Spectra Manufacturing

Honeywell Performance Fibers, Colonial Heights, Va., a unit of the Performance PolymersandChemicals
business, announced a major expansion in the production of its Spectra® high-tenacity and
high-modulus fiber to fulfill increasing demand in key growth segments. The expansion for the
Spectra 1000 and 2000 product families is scheduled in mid-2001.Our number-one responsibility is to
satisfy our customers, said Greg Herceg, business director, Spectra. This expansion demonstrates
our commitment to invest in our customers growth objectives by providing the support necessary to
achieve those goals.

May 2001

Spartan International Closes Mills

Spartanburg, S.C.-based Spartan International closed suddenly May 4, leaving 1,200 workers in six plants and the corporate offices without jobs.After defaults on financial agreements, assets of the company were seized by General Electric Corp., Fairfield, Conn. The management of the company made the decision to offer us peaceful possession of the assets, the collateral behind the loan, said John Oliver, spokesperson for General Electric, Stamford, Conn.Spartan had been a customer of General Electric since June 1999 but had trouble as early as December 1999, Oliver said.The six mills affected were the Spartanburg plant; the Rosemont plant, Jonesville, S.C.; the Jefferson plant, Jefferson, Ga.; the Cleveland-CaroKnits Lawndale plant, Lawndale, N.C.; the King Finishing plant, Statesboro, Ga.; and J.P. King Manufacturing, Augusta, Ga.Spartan President Barry Leonard said, We worked hard for several months trying to save the jobs of the 1,200 associates at Spartan International. We tried day and night to do that. Its a shame this is the result.Leonard blamed the companys problems on the economic slowdown and imported products.

Brilliant Ideas

Ted Wirtz (right) congratulates Wayne Hays, recipient of the inaugural IDEA Lifetime
Achievement Award. The nonwovens industry was center-stage at the IDEA01 show held March 27-29
in Miami Beach, Fla.The Association of the Nonwovens Fabric Industry (INDA) and Nonwovens Industry
magazine sponsored the inaugural IDEA01 Achievement Awards, which were presented during the opening
keynote session of the conference at the Miami Beach Convention Center.Wayne Hays, a founding
member of INDA, was honored with an award for Lifetime Achievement in the nonwovens industry. Ted
Wirtz, INDA president said, There are very few people in the world of nonwovens who do not know
Wayne Hays, and certainly everyone owes him a debt of gratitude for his pioneering work during the
formative years of our business.Six additional awards were presented. The 18 finalists are listed
here along with pictures of the award recipient in each category. Every company that was nominated
contributed significantly to the outstanding growth of the nonwovens industry, said Wirtz.Look for
a review of the IDEA01 show by Richard Mansfield in the June issue of
TI

IDEA01 Fibers and Raw Materials Achievement AwardEastman Chemical Co., Kingsport, Tenn.:
Eastar Bio Copolyester (pictured: Jon B. Woods, business unit manager, Packaging, Film and Fiber,
Eastman Chemical Co.)Fiber Innovation Technology, Johnson City, Tenn.: Bicomponent and Specialty
Polymer Staple Fibers3M, St. Paul, Minn.: Nextel Flame Stopping Dot Paper 

IDEA01 Equipment Achievement AwardDilo Systems Group, Charlotte, N.C.: Hyperpunch Needlelooms
(pictured: Klaus G. Maitre, executive vice president, Dilo Systems Group).KT Industries Inc., Fort
Wayne, Ind.: Stac-PacRieter-Perfojet, Greensboro, N.C.: AirLace 2000 

IDEA01 Rollgoods Achievement AwardPTI Inc., Christiansburg, Va.: K-Flex Ballistic Protection
Material (pictured: Alexander J. Park who accepted the award on behalf of his father, Andrew D.
Park, president, PTI Inc.)Freudenberg Nonwovens Group, Durham, N.C.: EvolonKimberly-Clark, Neenah,
Wis.: Intrepid Filter Material 

IDEA01 Short-Life End Product Achievement AwardProcterandGamble, Cincinnati: Swiffer
(pictured: Alex Cedeno, associate director, product development, fabric and home care, P and
G)Clopay Plastic Products Co., Cincinnati: Breathable LaminatesKimberly-Clark, Neenah, Wis.:
Huggies Little Swimmers 

IDEA01 Long-Life End Product Achievement AwardColbond, Enka, N.C.: Electrostat (pictured: Don
L. Brown, director, salesandmarketing, flooring/automotive, Colbond Nonwovens).All Felt/Hollinee,
Ingleside, Ill.: Electrostat Western Nonwovens Inc., Carson, Calif.: PolarGuard 

IDEA01 Entrepreneur Achievement AwardMogul SpunbondandMeltblown Nonwovens, Composites, Turkey
(pictured: Ekrem Kayali, Mogul SpunbondandMeltblown Nonwovens, Composites).Jentex, Buford,
Ga.VersaCore Industrial Corp., Kennett Square, Pa.

May 2001

Zimmer To Build Polyester Plant In India

Germany-based Zimmer AG and India-based Lurgi India, have been commissioned by the Indian South
Asian Petrochem Ltd. (ASPET) to supply and construct a polyester plant in Haldia, West Bengal.The
plant comprises a continuous polyester polycondensation unit and a solid-state polycondensation
unit to produce 400 tons of PET granulate per day. The total investment is approximately EUR 110
million, and the plant is due to go on-line in 2003.Zimmer will provide the technology, engineering
and equipment for the production plants, while Lurgi India will supply all ancillary facilities,
including engineering, for the erection of the complete plant.

May 2001

Fehrer AG Acquires Intellectual Property

Austria-based Fehrer AG has recently acquired North Adams, Mass.-based Morrison Berkshires
Papermaking Clothing Equipment (PMC) needling and finishing intellectual property. To ensure the
accurate transfer of the technology and to maintain future progression of the PMC finishing
machinery, Fehrer has hired Morrison Berkshires design engineer, Sadao Yagi.According to company
officials, Fehrer will now be the only machinery builder that can supply complete wet-felt
facilities with all capital equipment from fiber preparation, carding, cross-lapping, pre-needling,
finish-needling, heat-setting and finishing

.
April 2001

Ciba Specialty Chemicals Announces New Simplified Company Structure

Armin Meyer, chairman and CEO of Switzerland-based Ciba Specialty Chemicals, announced a simplified
company structure aimed at increasing profitable growth.The core of the strategy features an
alignment of business operational activities along customer industries. Ciba hopes this will
increase its speed of decision-making and accelerate the companys repositioning away from offering
just products to offering total integrated solutions with one face to the customer.The existing
nine business units will be grouped into five segments, and the divisional level will be
dissolved.Plastic Additives is headed by Felix Meyer and comprises the old Polymer Additives and
Process and Lubricant Additives business units. Coating Effects includes the Imaging and Coating
Additives and Colors for Inks, Paints and Plastics business units. It is headed by Hermann Angerer.
Water and Paper Treatment, a combination of the Paper Chemicals and Water Treatments business units
is headed by Mark Garrett. Textile Effects, headed by Christoph Biedermann, joins the Colors for
Textiles and Textile Chemicals units. Home and Personal Care, led by Tim Schlange, remains focused
on the same industry and will be adapted according to the new organization.Armin Meyer said, The
new simplified structure is aimed at increasing growth and profits and not at primarily saving
costs. We are creating five strong segments focused on their respective markets with all the
opportunities to respond faster and more efficiently to customer needs, to increase customer
relationships and to boost innovation.

April 2001

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