Go Green: Environmentally friendly fabrics
We flee the city to connect with nature and breathe fresh air. What could be worse, then, than arriving at
a cottage that reeks of fumes off-gassed from new vinyl blinds? Or knowing that the making of some of our
most common fabrics—such as cotton and polyester—has dire environmental consequences? While sustainable
textiles are still relatively hard to find, switching to eco-savvy alternatives makes for a healthier
cottage—and a happier planet.
Natural fibres
Cotton is
the world’s most ubiquitous natural fibre, but its conventional cultivation uses such large amounts of water
and agricultural chemicals that it’s also the planet’s most unsustainable fabric. Organic cotton minimizes
pesticide and insecticide use, but since it is still a very thirsty plant, other natural fibres prove more
eco-friendly. Hemp, for instance, is a renewable resource that’s naturally resistant to stains, mould, and
bacteria. Its fibres can be woven into material used for rugs and textiles. Linen and bamboo provide soft,
skin-friendly products such as towels and bedsheets, while coarser sisal, jute, and abaca can also be woven
into durable rugs.
Recycled content
Unlike natural fibres, synthetic textiles come from non-renewable petroleum and are often made with
harmful solvents and heavy-metal dyes. But some manufacturers now recycle polyester for a range of upholstery
fabrics. While these companies cater mostly to the commercial market, they also sell to the public. Look for
Eco Intelligent and Terratex fabrics.
For more information about environmentally friendly fabrics, check The Sustainable Furniture Council, a non-profit whose tagging program identifies good choices
in order to promote sustainable practices among manufacturers, retailers, and consumers, and TreeHugger, for a directory
of greener fabrics used in the home and to make clothing.
Fabrics, linens, and rugs
Organic and natural bed and bath linens
Enviro-friendly fabrics
Sustainable fabrics
Hemp fabrics
A directory listing manufacturers of recycled polyester upholstery
Sustainable
fabrics (made from eco wool or an eco-wool/eco-polyester blend; used for upholstery; made in Australia
but shipped worldwide)
Organic cotton fabrics and
wallpaper
Paper rugs, curtains, and fabrics
Blinds
Bamboo, reeds, and grasses (Search for Provenance blinds): www.hunterdouglas.com
Roller blinds made of woven hemp: www.frenchgeneral.com
Blinds and curtains made from tree bark strips, flax, and arrowroot fibres: www.conradshades.com
Window coverings made of rapidly renewable materials, sourced to reduce transportation impact: www.earthshade.com
- Susan Nerberg
Published in the Summer 2008
issue of Cottage Life magazine.
Copyright © 2008 by Cottage Life. All rights reserved. Reproduction of any
article, photograph, or artwork, for other than personal use, in whole or in part, without the written
permission of the publisher is strictly forbidden.
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