Posted on 06/23/2017 8:04:26 PM PDT by nickcarraway
The yogawear company Rumi X makes every piece of clothing it sells from materials that would otherwise end up in a landfill or the ocean.
For many yogis, achieving balance has to do with much more than just nailing the one-legged tree pose. It often has to do with more existential questions of being at one with the earth, which means protecting its future. This was certainly true for Melissa Chu, who grew up in the Bay Area, where everyone recycled obsessively and looked for ways to cut down their carbon footprintwhen they werent off at a meditation retreat, that is. Climate change was an ongoing topic of conversation, Chu says.
Seven years ago, Chu moved to Hong Kong for her job in the retail industry. The city was far more crowded, busy, and intense than she had expected. It was like New York on crack, she explains. To cope, I felt the need to deepen my yoga practice to manage the stress and the culture shock.
She would take trips to India to study under famous gurus and spent hours in Hong Kong studios doing sun salutations. But she began to wonder: Why isnt yoga gear more sustainable? Why do yoga devotees sweat through trendy outfits made from virgin materials that are sent to a landfill when theyre worn out? When she started thinking about it in earnest, the immensity of the waste killed her zen.
For the last couple of years, activewear has been driving the apparel industry forward. Morgan Stanleys research suggests that by 2020, the activewear market will represent $83 billion in sales, stealing market share from other clothing categories such as denim. But in order to keep up with demand, dozens of brands are popping into the market, churning out new designs regularly and driving down prices, in the same vein as fast fashion.
There is plenty of innovation happening when it comes to the technical aspects of athletic garments, with brands like Lululemon and Nike developing new fabrics that are adapting to different types of physical activity. But few brands are investing as heavily on creating eco-conscious activewear.
In 2015, Chu decided to launch a line of activewear called Rumi X that would be made from the most sustainable fabrics she could find. She was still living in Hong Kong, which happens to be one of the sourcing capitals of the world. So she set out to see what kinds of recycled materials would work in yoga pants. It all came together, she says. I decided I wanted to create a business where we would turn waste into wear.
Chu started one with rule: She wouldnt use any virgin materials. These days, many ethical brands are making clothing out of bamboo, which doesnt consume as much water as cotton. Others are focusing on organic cotton, which doesnt pollute the ground with pesticides and doesnt harm farmers. But Chu wasnt interested. Our mission is not to turn something natural that is in the environment into garments, she says. We want to take materials that would end up in our landfills or oceans and save that by turning it into something else. It turns out, theres a lot of innovation in terms of sustainable materials. Chu found one German manufacturer that turns spoiled cows milk into thread by adding a protein powder to it. Another company sweeps up the husks of flax seeds from the floors of production mills and turns it into a fiber for the production of fabric.
Rumi X Core Collection [Photo: courtesy of Rumi X] In the end, Chu chose a Taiwanese company called Singtex that uses a combination of coffee grounds and old plastic bottles to create a fabric. Employees of the company visit coffee shops around the city to pick up waste materials. The old bottles are turned into polyester and the roasted coffee grounds are mixed into the polyester to make a yarn. One T-shirt, for instance, is made out of three cups of coffee waste and five old bottles. Singtex ensures that all of these materials are saved from landfills. It even makes sure that the oil that is found in the leftover bean is extracted and sold to soap and cosmetic companies. Since many of these manufacturers are new and use cutting-edge technology, Chu is often able to work closely with them to develop materials that are perfectly calibrated to meet the needs of her customers, who would be using the pants, bras, and shirts for yoga. For instance, she wants the fabric to have four-way stretch but also feel very soft and organic, unlike many sportswear brands that make clothes that feel synthetic and Spandex-like. Given that many of her customers are based in Asia, where the climate is hot and humid, she also works to ensure that the fabric is thin and moisture wicking. And theres one added benefit of using coffee grounds: no stinky clothes. The final fabric still has the odor management properties of natural coffee beans, Chu says.
Chu is currently working with another company to create fabric made from discarded crab shells. The bulk of crabs are made of a natural chemical called chitin, which is a biopolymer. Scientists in Bavaria have found a way to extract chitin and use it for a wide variety of purposes, including fibers. This material, which blends together the crab shells with viscose, is called Crabyon. Its particularly good for Rumi X because it has natural anti-bacterial and anti-microbial qualities. Ironically, its super soft, Chu says. We can make very soft T-shirts out of this material.
Rumi X Core Collection [Photo: courtesy of Rumi X] Rumi X is sold directly to consumers worldwide through the stores website and via a network of brick and mortar retailers throughout the Asia Pacific region. The average price is $78. When it comes to marketing, Chu doesnt focus on the interesting materials used in the clothing, but instead describes the brands ethos of feeling good and being at peace with yourself. The brands name pays homage to the 13th-century Persian mystic, Rumi, who often wrote about how to live a meaningful and spiritual life, and each garment has one of his poems inscribed in it.
Ultimately, she believes that people will purchase RumiX over Lululemon or Nike because they appreciate the brands values and love wearing the product. The fact that the clothing is sustainable is an added bonus. Weve noticed that some markets that we sell to do appreciate the fact that were eco-friendly, she says. Other markets dont really care at all. So we always lead with design and slowly try to educate our customer about what our mission is.
But she hopes her company helps encourage others in the fashion industry to think creatively about using waste material to create clothing that is high quality and comfortable. Were really passionate about not wanting to create more waste, Chu says. Our goal is to reduce waste in any way we can. There are lots of companies creating really amazing fabrics out of stuff that we would otherwise just throw away.
Thank you!
I’ll bet you could bounce a quarter across the room off that bubble butt.
I worked at a site and met the owner of this company - he is developing the wasted outer shell of the coffee bean (thrown out now) and milling it to make “coffee flour”. The stuff he offered me was delicous.
http://www.emeraldpalate.com/coffee-flour-the-next-super-food-and-the-chocolate-company-using-it/
Belliveau: Every year billions of pounds of coffee cherry fruit, a by-product of green coffee production, are discarded or, to a lesser degree, composted into fertilizer. Rather than leave these cherries to rot in heaps or be dumped into rivers, CoffeeFlour uses a proprietary method to convert the cherry pulp into a nutrient-dense ingredient that can be used for baking, cooking, mixing drinks, and crafting chocolate. This is how CoffeeFlour is made.
The result is an incredibly nutritious and distinctly flavorful cooking ingredient, with more fiber per gram than whole grain wheat flour, more protein per gram than fresh kale, more potassium per gram than a banana, and more iron per gram than fresh spinach.
CoffeeFlour makes the most of a food source that we already have and are not using to its fullest potential.
Very cool.
And while I wouldn’t wear a shirt made out of plastic (that would be unbreathable polyester) crab sounds very interesting.
Bravo for this entrepreneur.
Looks like NYC....
Reality
Graphic doesn’t show unless you paste and go to https://cdn.meme.am/cache/instances/folder375/62247375.jpg first.
Huh....thanks for the heads up. Using Android Chrome on FR preview the image showed resized as my html code spec’d. Odd that it didn’t show. Chrome much slower than Firefox on my phone.6
There are some images that just plain won’t show on any computer that doesn’t have them in the cache from looking them up.
They’ll look just fine in preview, but won’t display on other computers.
Don’t know why...
Life is so unfair.
The proliferation of yoga pants did not happen until I reached my late 60’s.
Oh, well. At least I have perfect vision with the advent of second sight.
Unless I am mistaken this story is about a woman who simply decided to make her clothing line out of “sustainable” fabric. She did not invent the fabric, she just selected one from of a number of commercially available choices. Is that really newsworthy?
Anything that progresses The Agenda is newsworthy, Citizen.
We had a coffee tree for a while, the cherries are tasty.
“Besides in jcocos arabica cherry chocolate bar, CoffeeFlour is now available to consumers via Marx Pantry.”
Note the name of the store.
Just sayin’...
Seeing as it is Seattle I figured it very well could have been named after the commie. But - I looked around. The CEO was born in 1977, graduated Magna Cum Laude in business, then law school, and now is Fifth generation of his family in the food business - starting this online gourmet food company.
But yeah, I’m guessing his last name of Marx did add to some of the draw.
FWIW the pic showed for me and I’ve never seen it before. Running Firefox.
Exactly right.
Perhaps our settings are different? I’m also running Firefox.
That could be. I’m not good with that stuff. I have seen that before, where a pic will show after going directly to the URL and then back, and sometimes I can see the pic at the URL and it still doesn’t show on the FR page.
It’s a mystery! Like ancient aliens. ;-)
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.