Sunday, January 27, 2013

DownDog Boutique says Hello Minawear!



Minawear was founded in 1998 by Mina Hegaard and her hemp activist brother Kenyon Gibson in Venice Beach California. Together they built the company to promote health, education, and the care of the planet. In 2007, the company was acquired by GeoMio, another Los Angeles based eco-fashion manufacturer.

Today Minawear is back in the hands of its namesake, and operating from Victoria Texas. In this stage of the Minawear re-launch, Mina is doing the productions in China, where the hemp is grown.

China is our choice because this is the only place in the world that has the capabilities to grow, process, knit, cut, sew, dye and package the hemp with the least amount of carbon footprint. All phases of the operation are closely monitored for the high quality and fair practices that Minawear has always been known for.
Kenyon resides in New York City, where he is a falcon artist, blogger and hemp activist.

See the collection here: Minawear







Friday, January 25, 2013

DownDog Boutique says hello to Spacecat!



View the Spacecat line at www.downdogboutique.com or click here SPACECAT

About Spacecat:

Spacecat was created in New York City in 2000, when Yumi Miyanishi made a claymation short film called “Katzilla” (click to view movie)
As a four year old, my favorite thing was making clothes for my Barbie doll! Always interested in fashion and being different, after I started practicing Ashtanga Yoga, I noticed what women were wearing.  Seeing the same yoga/athletic-wear everywhere, I thought there must be other women who would like to dress differently to practice yoga or work out. Moving from New York to New Orleans and then to Miami Beach, the idea of my own  line gradually took shape.
With the encouragement and help of many friends, I decided to use my background in fashion design and create yoga/athletic-wear that I wanted to wear.
Spacecat Inc was launched in June 2010 in Miami Beach, Florida.

About Spacecat’s products:

We make garments that are fun to wear using technologically advanced textiles for Yoga, Running, Biking, Skateboarding, Rollerblading, Gym Exercise and Pole Dancing. Our Prints are wonderful for water activities like Swimming, Sailing and Boating. Or just wearing out as playful and colorful Street Wear!
All our Athletic wear collection uses four-way stretch fabrics, which is ideal for today’s active women.
All SPACECAT garments are happily made with sunshine and love in Miami, Florida, U.S.A by a mother and daughter and their friendly team.

SPACECAT Fabric care information
  • Solid-color garments are made of Supplex and Lycra, with a soft cotton feel but moisture wicking and fast drying.
  • Athletic top's lining is made of Coolmax fabric, specially developed to keep you cool by wicking moisture away from your body at an amazing speed to leaves you dry quickly!
  • Our prints and holograms are made of nylon and spandex, which feels super lightweight and dries quickly.  It’s like not wearing anything—a performance enhancing plus!

How to care for all fabrics:
We recommend Machine Wash Cold Gentle Cycle with Like Colors. Hang Dry. Use Non-Chlorine Bleach only. Do not Iron. Do not Dry clean.

Hologram fabric must be Hand Wash Cold, Do not Ring, Hang Dry in Shade. Use Non-Chlorine Bleach only. Do not Iron. Do not Dry clean. (Hologram will come off in Machine wash and Dryer)

Sunday, January 13, 2013

Bamboo Yoga Clothing: Green or Green washed?




Bamboo Yoga Clothing: Green or Green washed?


We have had quite a bit of feedback in recent weeks to our creation of an Organic Yoga Clothing category on our website www.DownDogBoutique.com

Some of the feedback addresses the questions about how environmentally friendly Organic Yoga clothing really is. We decided to carry out some research on the subject and put together a couple of blog posts with our findings.

Yoga Clothing can mainly be broken down in to four types of fabrics. Almost all require some form of stretchy material to be blended in such as Spandex or other synthetics. Spandex is made basically from petroleum as are nearly all stretchy clothing substances. There may be some Organic versions on the horizon in the near future but for now all stretchy Yoga clothes including Organic ones include some form of synthetics. Most Organic Yoga clothes limit the amount of synthetic materials to no more than 10% of the overall content.

So the four types are:

  1. Non-Organic Cotton
  2. Organic Cotton
  3. Bamboo (All of which seems to be Organic in the Yoga market at least)
  4. Synthetic

To make the subject more manageable and not to make the blog posts too long we will tackle each type in a different post. This first post will look at Bamboo as that is the one that is generally being accused of being “Green washed”.

Green washing for anyone not familiar with the term means that companies are taking a product that is not really environmentally friendly and claiming it is for the purposes of marketing that product as “Green”.

The case against bamboo clothing is pretty simple. No one really disputes that bamboo is one of the fastest growing plants on the planet, uses very little chemicals and fertilizers to make it grow and uses a fraction of the water compared to all forms of cotton.

This Wikipedia page summarizes the benefits of bamboo as a crop for fabric production very well: wikipedia 

The case against bamboo is based on the production of turning that Bamboo into fabric.
There are two ways to do this.  One is mechanical where they pulp and squeeze the bamboo with no chemicals.  This is fairly easy on the environment but produces quite rough fabric that people, and in particular people planning to exercise in the clothing, tend to find uncomfortable.


The second and more common method involves the use of Sodium Hydroxide also known as caustic soda to break down the pulp and help turn in it to the soft cashmere like fabric that is favored by most designers and wearers of bamboo clothing.

I have to say that having read many of the blogs and “news stories” that claim that bamboo production using this method is being green washed I really see little or no evidence for this view being produced. The claim is made that caustic soda is bad for the environment. This is clearly true, however what really matters is not what “could” happen to any chemical but what actually does happen. Let’s try and clear up some facts.

  1. Bamboo fabric is pretty much all made in China. That is where most of the world’s bamboo is grown. It is used in the production of many products.
  2.  There are few companies that convert bamboo to fabric and even fewer that then make the fabric into Yoga clothes.
  3. Sodium Hydroxide (Caustic soda) is a nasty substance if left untreated. Besides clothing though, it is used in the production of paper in the food industry and in the home as a cleaner.  Treated properly it is relatively harmless.

It would seem therefore, that if the treatment of the waste products that are used to produce the bamboo fabric are handled properly then bamboo is probably the greenest of all the materials used to manufacture Yoga clothing.

I asked our partner (Organic) manufacturers that we represent in our boutique to comment on what kind of systems are in use for the production of the fabric and the handling of the chemicals.

Here is what Cristofer Smith the owner of Green Apple Organics had to say: “After 22 years of manufacturing textiles and garments for athletes, we own our own operation. We do our own knitting all the way through to what you receive. Then our patent process uses the Viscose method- an encapsulated method where nothing escapes from the drum except to be recycled or used again. Most evaporates so there is little left over if any.”


Bonnie Siefers, the owner of Jonano Organic Clothing, provided us with access to a statement by the Chinese manufacturer of Organic Bamboo fabric used mainly in their clothing. The fabric manufacturer, clearly responding to the Green wash criticism, issued a very detailed statement citing many third party verifications of its fabrics and processes. A lot of it is quite technical but here is the most relevant section to the core questions:

One of the most important parts of the process is all recyclable. We process in a hermetic container where 100% of the chemicals that are used are trapped and contained - not released into our factory, environment or atmosphere. 73% of CS2’s are recycled, 26% are recycled into H2SO4. So those chemicals do not pollute any part of the environment.



Each step of the process is watched for many reasons: Company policy, brand commitment, and China's strict environmental ethical standards. We know many of these processing issues are extremely sensitive and we are committed to be a leader in the eco/green industry when it comes to bamboo fiber, but also for the safety of our team/staff.

We do not claim the entire process is “green”, but we do strive to be as eco-friendly as possible and are accountable for our process and recycling of these chemicals. Tanboocel bamboo fiber also has passed OEKO-TEX STANDARD 100 which is another leader when it comes to testing for harmful substances. We have passed these OEKO TEX STANDARDS 3 years in a row. The bamboo we use and process is certified by (OCIA) Organic Crops Improvement Association International which is certifies our bamboo is organic bamboo under “wild crops” and certified organic under “organic farms”. Our vision and commitment has always been to be as eco-friendly as possible and has not changed in any part of our processing from start to finish.”

In conclusion, after having weighed up the issue we believe that at the very least the manufacturers offering Organic Bamboo clothing in our boutique (www.downdogboutique.com) do meet the criteria for labeling their products “green” or environmentally friendly. Clearly bamboo is a much better raw material and we believe that every effort is being made to process the bamboo into fabric in what are called “closed loop” systems where little or no harmful byproducts escape.

We will be examining what goes into the other three types of fabrics used in Yoga clothing manufacture and will devote a similar blog post to each type, however for now we believe that bamboo is the greenest of the options currently available.

We welcome feedback and opinions.  If anyone has any actual evidence that bamboo fabric production is causing harm to the environment rather than it “could” cause harm we would be happy to review it.

Namaste,
DownDog Boutique

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