mlackman
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Not too Clothes for Comfort
Dear Umbra,
You are generally close in your advice, but in your Clothes Encounters blurb you missed. "Environmentally speaking," truly natural and organic clothing is nothing like conventional, synthetic chemical clothing in terms of the toxicity of turning raw materials into wearable clothing. Just ask any one who lives down river from a traditional clothing manufacturer. Organic clothing manufacturers do not use toxic chemicals or toxic dyes in the preparation, manufacturing and finish processing of their garments. Conventional manufacturers do ... plenty!Conventionally grown cotton is one of the largest consumers of pesticides worldwide and a major contributor to environmental damage. GMO cottons are a further complicating and destructive factor. In contrast, organic, naturally grown cotton sustains and revitalizes the soil.
Chemical sensitivities are a growing health problem in the US and worldwide as our environment becomes more and more flooded with toxic substances. Your skin is very absorbent and toxins from chemically manufactured clothing will enter your body through your skin. Toxic chemicals used during the finishing processing in manufacturing - especially the easy care finishes such as wrinkle free and stain resistent - are a major source of toxins absorbed by the skin.
Your suggestion to buy natural fibers such as wool, hemp and cotton is worthless if the fabrics from these fibers are then conventionally manufactured to produce conventional chemical clothing.
In our OrganicClothing.blogs.com, we have researched and written extensively about all aspects of organic clothing from many perspectives: environmental, health, social, economic, fashion. Clothing is an especially sensitive topic for us.
So, should you be scared for your nylon- and polyester-clad children. Probably, yes! Maybe not today but for their tomorrows. Toxins accumulate in the body and they can come from a huge variety of sources. And what comes into closer and more prolonged contact with our skin than our clothes?
Enjoy.
On Umbra on synthetic fabrics and kids posted 3 years ago 2 Responses