Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Recycling Fibres!

http://www.treehugger.com/Puente-Hills-Landfill.jpg
     When we consider recycling fibers we must put strong emphasis on the energy consumed in the recycling process. It can easily consume more energy to recycle materials than to create more of them from their natural resources, so we must not automatically laud a company for simply recycling, but we must scrutinize the process that they used. Unfortunately, recycling often costs more money as well when the process might in fact be more energy efficient than producing new materials. So for economic reasons many products go unrecycled and sit in landfills :(


http://freddyo.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/03/Picture-31.png
Fortunately there are many systems in place that provide a bumper before clothing gets so worn out that it might end up in the garbage. Some common practices for the disposal of used clothing are donating it to places such as Salvation Army (where it will be sold very cheaply and the donor receives a tax-break) or consigning the clothing for some return of the purchase price. Because of these options most clothing takes a veryyyy long time to end up in landfills(woohoo!), but not all used clothing is in a state conducive of reuse. After cycles of use and reuse, fabrics wear out, and at this point many people would throw the clothes in the garbage, BUT the fabric can be recycled!

Patagonia is a great example of fabric recycling on an industrial level. Most of their polyester clothing is in fact made from recycled water bottles! How cool is that? This video explains it all: http://www.patagonia.com/us/footprint/index.jsp?id=25146
Also, this jacket from Patagonia that I got with the crew team is made from 60% recycled materials! http://www.patagonia.com/us/footprint/index.jsp?id=25146 That's better than most products in the garment industry, but the company says they still have a ways to go. Not only do they recycle polyester, but according to this website 
http://ehp03.niehs.nih.gov/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1289%2Fehp.115-a449 much of their cotton is from recycled material as well. "Patagonia also recycles its cotton T-shirts through Italian company Calamai Functional Fabrics. According to Trailspace.com, an outdoor gear information site, recycling cotton saves 20,000 liters of water per kilogram of cotton, a water-intensive crop." Unfortunately the pricetag on the clothing reflects the expensive process used to make it, so even though recycling clothing is a technologically feasible action, the current economic state of it prevent it from being more widespread than it is. 

There is a company that focuses on clothing recycling in New York City, and it runs by donation mostly called Wearable Collections http://www.wearablecollections.com/index.php. It is an absolute necessity to our consumer culture, if only it were present on a broader scale (the company operates in New York City, central New Jersey, and Long Island). From their company reusable clothing goes to second-hand stores, rags become wiping and polishing cloths, and the remaining fibers get broken down to go in mattresses and couches. It is a for-profit company, but they provide the service of collecting used clothing for free, and raise a significant amount of funds for charity as well. 

Friday, December 3, 2010

FINISHED THE HAT!

    If you've never knitted before you might not understand, but finishing a knitting project is a very exciting feeling (especially when it requires doing something tedious and annoying, like cable-knit). At the risk of sounding like a huge dork, when I am approaching the end of a knitting project a feverish feeling of "I MUST FINISH THIS" comes over me. I guess I could say that it is similar to the feeling of nearing the end of a really good book that's 1,000 pages long. If ya know what I mean. 

Photo courtesy of me!
    There were definitely a couple of occasions during the process of finishing the hat when I thought I dropped stitch (if you drop a knitted stitch the WHOLE thing unravels!), and so for several stressful minutes had to search for the stitch. . .it was bad news bears. But it all turned out ok! No grey hairs here! It is definitely a very warm hat, appropriate for winters in Providence, RI (ugh, it's so freaking cold!). Annoyingly, the band of ribbing is a tiny bit looser than it should feel, but I wasn't about to buy a smaller set of needles for those few rows. A university student's budget doesn't really include having knitting needles of every size at hand. Let's not be extraneous here, it is a sustainable hat after all! Let's examine the footprint of the hat: so the sweater was originally made in Mauritius, but I bought it used just up Thayer street, no additional animals were shorn to harvest the cashmere, so no additional land use or water. I did not have to order the yarn to get it delivered to me, though it did travel to New York with me during thanksgiving, but I don't think that counts. It might use more material than a hat with a simpler pattern, but it is prettier and warmer, so I'd rather it not be cold and ugly. But I like to think that the recycledness offsets the amount of yarn used, although the difference in amount of yarn used from one hat to another could be so negligible that this is arbitrary to consider. Well, thanks Ros and Nana for all your help!