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Green is the new black

Green is the new black

Write: Saunderson [2011-05-20]

Clothing made from bamboo-based fabric keeps you warm or cool as needed, has antibacterial properties and doesn't require special handling

It drapes like silk, it breathes better than cotton and it's softer than your favorite flannel jammies. With credentials like that, it hardly seems necessary to mention that the fabric is eco-friendly.

Bamboo, which requires neither fertilizers nor pesticides to grow at the amazing rate of a foot a day, has for some time been the darling of the green crowd, who touts its hardness as a quality that makes it suitable for products like flooring and furniture.

But bamboo has its softer side, too.

Bamboo fibers can be spun into a fabric that feels soft, is easy to care for, keeps you cool in warm weather and warm in cool weather, and even is said to have naturally antibacterial properties that make it odor-resistant.

Companies like Bamboosa, Spun Bamboo, United Bamboo and Jonano have jumped on the bamboo bandwagon, offering items such as T-shirts, socks and hooded jerseys.

Designers like Carilyn Vaile and Amanda Shi have taken bamboo a step further, conjuring up entire wardrobes of out flowing bamboo and bamboo-blend fabrics.

Vaile's versatile Green Label collection - she sells a skirt that can be worn as a dress and dresses that can be worn multiple ways - is composed of a 92 percent-bamboo-fiber fabric she calls BambooTee. The fabric has a touch of spandex "for memory and comfort."

Bamboo was a natural fit with the way Vaile was already designing. "What we're known for is being comfortable and chic," she says. Once I heard about all the properties of bamboo - it can be washed and dried, and doesn't require special care - it fit really well with the versatile and multifunctional pieces that we make."

Rich Delano, who lives in China and owns a factory there that produces bamboo clothing sold under a number of private labels, started his trek into the world of bamboo fashions in 2004. When I started my company, no one was doing it," he says.

The feel of the fabric is the number one advantage of bamboo, Delano says. "We always have our favorite T-shirt that's worn down and feels super soft, and bamboo is like that from the start."

Most bamboo-clothing vendors are virtual stores, but Daniel Jacobs is the owner of Shirts of Bamboo, a ricks-and-mortar store in St Petersburg, Florida, that sells only bamboo clothing.

"People love the product," he says. "The look on their face when they touch it for the first time is just so wonderful to see."

If all this bamboo ballyhoo sounds too good to be true, there are some environmentalists who are not totally enamored of bamboo fabric. Although bamboo is, indeed, considered a sustainable product and an excellent choice for materials like flooring, the process used to break bamboo down into the fibers that are made into cloth uses caustic chemicals, writes a blogger on treehugger.com, a popular environmentalist site. But then the same blogger goes on to cite the many positive qualities of bamboo fabric, including that it is 100 percent biodegradable.

Where to buy bamboo clothing Bamboo clothing can be hard to come by. Products mentioned in the story can be purchased at the following Web sites.

Visit www.carilynvaile.com for details on Carilyn Vaile fashions

Amand Shi's sophisticated Avita line is available at www.avitastyle.com

Jonano sells clothing from a bamboo fabric it calls ecoKashmere.

Shop at www.jonano.com

Spun Bamboo sells Rich Delano's products. Shop at www.bambooclothes.com

Shirts of Bamboo's Web site is www.shirtsofbamboo.com