There is an ample supply of cotton biomass. The global volume of cotton harvesting and ginning byproducts – which includes burs, stems, immature bolls, lint, sticks and leaves – can be as much as 3 million tons per year. One 480 lb. bale of cotton, for example, can produce 150-200 lbs. of usable byproducts.
Mass appeal for environmentally conscious
Archroma’s EarthColors application on cotton byproducts marks the first time the cotton plant has been used to actually dye cotton fabrics. Dyeing a natural fiber with dye processed with natural ingredients has appeal for many environmentally conscious brands, a niche Archroma aimed to fill with the launch of the line in 2014.
“We are grateful to Cotton Incorporated to have brought us this challenge,” said Nuria Estape, head of Textile Specialties Global Marketing & Promotion at Archroma. “Archroma strives to challenge the status quo, and our EarthColors technology demonstrates our dedication to support and inspire sustainable fashion with warm colors that can be traced from the field to the shop.”
Indeed, each batch of EarthColors dye offers a high level of traceability in the form of a hangtag with a Near Field Communication chip. Data on the chip, which can be accessed by Archroma customers and even consumers through a smart phone, explains the manufacturing process of the dye and where the natural materials were sourced.
Similarly, every bale of cotton grown in the United States receives a bale identification tag. The tag allows cotton businesses to trace the journey of the bale as far back as the facility where the cotton was ginned. The tag also includes information on the fiber characteristics for the cotton contained in the bale, which allows for efficient inventory management by merchants and mills.
Cotton Incorporated presented fabric samples dyed with the EarthColors cotton-derived dye at the Premiere Vision trade fair in Paris this month. The knit and woven constructions, produced at Cotton Incorporated’s laboratories and at the Cone White Oak facility in Greensboro, N.C., demonstrate the range of brown hues that be achieved using 100 percent cotton biomass as the source.
Sources: Archroma and Cotton Incorporated
Posted September 20, 2016
REINACH, Switzerland – Cotton Incorporated, the research and promotion company for cotton, and Archroma, a global leader in color and specialty chemicals, have collaborated to present what they believe is the first-ever dye derived from cotton plant residues.
Cotton Incorporated approached Archroma and challenged the company to develop a dye option that may represent the first opportunity in modern textile history to create and color a fabric using a single plant source. EarthColors is Archroma’s innovative method of creating dyes in warm, ternary shades from nature. The patented technology addresses two key concerns of the textile industry: sustainability and traceability.
These sulfur-based dyes are designed for use on cellulosic fibers, such as cotton. While most dyes in the textile industry are synthetic, using petrochemicals (oil) as a base, EarthColors is a biosynthetic alternative that utilizes natural waste from the agricultural or herbal industry.
“As soon as we heard about the EarthColors technology, we wanted to explore the possibilities of cotton as a natural dye source,” said Mary Ankeny, senior director of Textile Chemistry Research at Cotton Incorporated, who led the project from the Cotton Incorporated side.
Dye derived from cotton plant
Cotton Incorporated, Archroma redefine ‘100 cotton’
The dye option may represent the first opportunity in modern textile history to create and color a fabric using a single plant source.
These sulfur-based dyes are designed for use on cellulosic fibers, such as cotton.
While most dyes in the textile industry are synthetic, using petrochemicals (oil) as a base, EarthColors is a biosynthetic alternative.
The dye option may represent the first opportunity in modern textile history to create and color a fabric using a single plant source.