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Sweden's TMAS members showcase sustainable finishing, decoration tech

29 Oct '21
4 min read
Pic: TMAS
Pic: TMAS

Members of the Textile Machinery Association of Sweden (TMAS) are proving instrumental in pioneering new sustainable processes for the dyeing, finishing and decoration of textiles. TMAS members Baldwin Technology and Coloreel both showcased solutions for sustainable finishing and decoration at the recently held Sustainable Finishing of Textiles Conference.

At the conference held across three separate afternoons on September 30, October 1 and October 7, delegates heard that Sweden will introduce extended producer responsibility (EPR) for waste textiles and clothing at the beginning of 2022, ahead of the adoption of a similar European Union-wide EPR system in 2025.

In Sweden, this is already leading to the establishment of advanced digital sorting and recycling infrastructure and from a brand perspective, H&M now leads the field in both addressing circularity from its suppliers and minimising its own waste. Swedish companies are also active in the development of new fibres derived from waste clothing, building on the country’s legacy leadership in pulp and paper production.

At the Sustainable Finishing of Textiles Conference, however, it was said that all the environmental gains made by such sustainable new fibres can potentially be cancelled out in the further processing they are subjected to – and especially in resource-intensive conventional dyeing, finishing and decoration, TMAS said in a media release. Baldwin Technology and Coloreel have both developed solutions to address this issue.

Baldwin’s VP of global business development Rick Stanford explained during the conference that his company’s TexCoat G4 non-contact spray technology significantly reduces water, chemistry and energy consumption in the finishing process. It consistently and uniformly sprays chemistry across a fabric surface and applies it only where needed, on one or both sides.

“Customers can expect no bath contamination during the finishing process, as well as minimal downtime during changeovers, which are made easy with recipe management that includes automated chemistry and coverage selection,” he said.

The TexCoat G4 also wastes no chemistry during colour, fabric or chemistry changeovers, and because only the required chemistry volume is applied to the fabric, wet pick-up levels can be reduced by up to 50 per cent – leading to 50 per cent less water and energy consumption compared to conventional finishing processes. Furthermore, several customers are combining TexCoat Spray and back-coating in series prior to the stenter. This simplifies the production process from two steps to one, delivering both drying savings and productivity increases.

Coloreel’s CEO Mattias Nordin outlined the benefits of his company’s technology which enables the high-quality and instant colouring of a textile thread on-demand and can be paired with any existing embroidery machine without modification. This enables unique effects like shades and gradient to be achieved in an embroidery for the first time.

“Our technology is now commercialised and we are scaling up our business globally,” Nordin said. “The foundation of the company was based on the idea that there were millions of varieties of thread reels out there, many of which would become obsolete and turned into waste and that it would be simpler to dye the thread as you use it. That’s what we have achieved.”

Based on a CMYK ink system, Coloreel’s advanced rapid colouring software and high-speed drive technology allow a single needle to carry out what previously required multiples of them to do – and with much more consistent stitch quality.

In addition, existing thread dyeing plants can add a single solid colour to a thread, but by instantly colouring a white base thread during production, Coloreel enables complete freedom to create unique embroideries without any limitations in the use of colours. Colour changes along the thread can either be made rapidly from one solid colour to another, or gradually, to make smooth transitions or any colouring effect desired.

This provides big benefits when it comes to sustainability. There is a significant reduction in wasted inks, while water usage is minimised, and production speeds are increased. The technology allows set-up and lead times to be reduced as well as significant flexibility in production quantities, while eliminating the need for large thread inventories.

“It’s great to see TMAS members playing a pioneering part in what is now shaping up to be a vital rethinking of the textile supply chain here in Scandinavia,” added TMAS secretary general Therese Premler-Andersson. “All of these ideas are now gaining momentum and likely to be adopted throughout the world. A more circular and sustainable industry will be the result, to the benefit of everyone.”

Fibre2Fashion News Desk (JL)

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