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Wool
Facts Behind the Fiber
Sheep and wool have been woven into the fabric
of human civilization for more than 10,000 years
beginning in Asia Minor, which is now basically
the country of Turkey. The natural migrations of
peoples, the spread of religions, and the
conquests of armies – especially the Roman armies
in Northern Africa, Spain and the British Isles,
and the Spanish Conquistadors and Church in the
New World of the Americas – spread sheep and the
use of wools across large parts of the world.
After all these millennium wool is still a major
textile cornerstone for clothing, bedding,
carpeting and household furnishings.
Some people feel that the reason for this
enduring and endearing relationship is because
wool is composed of the same protein that makes up
the outer protective layer of your skin and wool
works in total harmony with your body's own
protection mechanisms. Wool has naturally
developed a higher level of in-built UV protection
than many other fibers. Wool also has natural
recovery. Each fiber is resilient and springy,
thanks to its complex internal structure, giving
clothes a beautiful drape and greater crease
resistance.
Wool is a uniquely natural fiber that has a
number of benefits. So, why wool?
- Built-in climate control. Wool is a
natural insulator to keep you warm in winter and
naturally breathable to keep you cool in summer.
Wool fiber helps to keep your body at the
optimal temperature zone for comfort and rest.
When used in blankets, synthetic fibers, down
and even cotton fibers do not breathe as well as
wool, and are more likely to trap heat in your
bed. Wool buffers the extreme cold or hot air on
the outside, keeping your body in that comfort
zone.
- Naturally absorbent fiber. Wool fiber
is the original wicking fiber. Its coil-like
shape pulls excess heat and moisture from your
skin while you sleep. Wool fabrics can absorb up
to 30% of their weight without feeling heavy or
damp. Cotton fabrics begin to feel damp after
15%. The absorbent fibers "breathe" by wicking
away moisture from the body and releasing it
into the air. This quality makes wool fabrics
comfortable to wear in warm and cold weather.
- Natural mildew and mold resistance.
Wool's natural resistance to mildews and molds
comes from the way it repels moisture, and lets
moisture pass through it's fibers without
holding the moisture. Mildews and molds require
moisture to live and grow.
- Perfect insulator. Wool is warm in
winter and cool in the summer because of its
hydrophilic ability to wick away excess
moisture. In the winter, wool removes moisture
from the skin to keep the wearer feeling warm
and dry and wool’s insulating qualities trap dry
air and warmth near the skin. This is unlike
synthetic fleece, which is warm but does not
breathe easily. Wool's natural insulating
quality and its ability to shed water results in
a fabric that keeps the body warm even when it's
raining. In the summer, wool’s coil-like shape
pulls excess heat and moisture from your skin
helping the wearer stay cooler.
- Water repellent. Tiny overlapping
scales encase the wool fiber like tiles on a
roof. This allows wool to repel rain, snow and
liquid spills with ease.
- Wool is durable. Laboratory tests
have shown that wool fibers resist tearing and
can bend back on themselves more than 20,000
times without breaking. Cotton breaks after
3,200 bends, silk fibers break after 1,800
bends, and rayon fibers break after just 75
bends. Wool clothing will last for years. Wool
resists spills, dries very quickly and is mildew
resistant.
- Naturally wrinkle resistant. Wool
fabrics resist wrinkles. Wool is the most
resilient fiber because it has a natural crimp
that helps it keep its shape. Wool fibers can be
stretched and still bounce back to their
original shape.
- Fire retardant. Wool is safer to wear
having natural fire-retardant properties. It can
resist flame without the chemical treatment
involved in fireproofing. Synthetic fleece is
oil based, ignites easily, burns fiercely and
melts. If your synthetic fleece is fire proofed,
then you have the fire proofing chemicals next
to your skin.
- Resists static, dirt and dust. Wool
fabric doesn't collect much static because of
its absorbent fibers. Static attracts lint,
dirt, and dust. Wool fabrics also clean easily
because dirt sits on the surface of the fiber.
The outside surface of the wool fiber consists
of a series of overlapping scales, similar to
the feathers on a bird, making it easy to brush
off and for stains to lift out.
- Wool is colorful. There are an
amazing variety and number of breeds of sheep
that come in a wide array of colors giving us a
huge number of natural colors. In additional to
natural color-grown fibers, the structure of
wool fibers allow wool to easily accept dyes
without the need for harsh and sometimes toxic
chemicals to prepare the fiber for dyes. When
wool fabrics are dyed, the dye reaches to the
core of the fiber and bonds permanently. Almost
any color and dye can be used.
- Naturally non-allergenic. Wool is
almost entirely non-allergenic. Although some
people do have a rare natural allergy to
Lanolin, the oil found in wool, most people's
allergy to wool is a reaction to the many harsh
and toxic chemicals that go into the treatment,
and finishing of conventional wool garments and
bedding. Serious chemical abrasives are
routinely used to wash raw wool for processing.
Chlorine and mothproofing chemicals are
routinely applied to conventional wool before
turning it into a finished product.
- Renewable and Sustainable. Wool is a
renewable resource that can be shorn from sheep
annually. It is biodegradable and kinder to the
environment than oil-based synthetics, which
contribute to global pollution. Wool is
sustainable. Wool from free-grazing sheep,
treated ethically throughout their long lives,
represents a traditional small-scale industry
that once thrived in America. Today, many small
organic farmers are returning to this
sustainable industry to create clean and healthy
wool that is produced without stress to the
animals or the environment.
At the Polytechnic Institute in Wales, research
conducted on the effect of various bedding
materials during sleep indicated that wool's
ability to wick moisture away keeps skin drier
during sleep than any of the other fibers tested.
This is significant because during sleep people
can lose more than one pint of water per night
through their skin and breath. Their research also
indicated that sleepers in wool-filled comforters
had lower heart rates suggesting a more restful
state of sleep than sleepers using comforters
filled with down feathers or synthetics.
All of this just substantiates what many have
known and experienced for centuries: wool is a
wonderful fiber. Unfortunately, just as with the
purity of cotton, sheep growers and wool fabric
manufacturers have fallen under the dark siren’s
song of better, easier and more profitable living
through chemistry.
Conventional Wool Production.
Here’s the story. Sheep live outside and
require large areas for grazing. When sheep are
confined and their pastures are overgrazed, they
become more susceptible to mange and pests such as
mites, lice, and flies. To control these pests and
parasites, more than 14,000 pounds of pesticides
were applied to sheep in the U.S. The most common
conventional pesticide treatments contain
potentially dangerous organo-phosphorus compounds.
The top three pesticides used on sheep are
moderately toxic to humans but they are moderately
to highly toxic to fish and amphibians, such as
frogs, and they are suspected endocrine
disruptors. Some of these pesticides are also
highly water soluble which means that they can
easily be carried from the sheep dip application
site by rain or irrigation water runoff into our
streams and rivers and contaminate our
groundwater.
According to the Organic Trade Association:
“Pesticides used in sheep dips have consistently
been linked with damage to the nervous system in
workers that have been exposed to them in the
United Kingdom. Even low-dose exposure over the
long term has been conclusively linked with
reduced nerve fiber function, anxiety, and
depression. Long-term exposure to sheep dip has
also been linked to reduced bone formation. In
addition, residues of diflubenzuron, an
insecticide used in sheep dips, persist in the
environment for more than a year.”
This is just to control external pests. Sheep
are also susceptible to internal parasitic worms.
The conventional doctrine for control is to
routinely dose the animals with drugs.
And then there is the issue of antibiotic feed
additives, such as oxytetracycline and
chlortetracycline, sometimes given to sheep to
promote slightly faster growth and to compensate
for overcrowded and unhealthy conditions in
concentrated sheep pens. Again according to the
Organic Trade Association, “Mounting evidence
suggests that widespread use of agricultural
antibiotics is contaminating surface waters and
groundwater, including drinking water, in many
rural areas as a result of their presence in
animals waste. This non-human use of antibiotics
is compromising medicine's effectiveness in people
as bacteria become resistant to antibiotics over
time.”
So much for the purity of conventionally grown
wool. Small wonder that Little Bo Beep lost her
sheep. She probably also lost her lunch after
discovering what Farmer Brown was doing to her
sheep.
Conventional Wool Fabric Manufacturing
As with cotton, the health dangers to the
environment and the consumer are only compounded
with the conventional production of fabrics and
garments from conventionally grown wool. The
conventional wool garment manufacturing process
typically employs harsh scouring agents and
bleaches to clean and whiten the wool,
formaldehyde, polyester, foams, dioxins,
conditioners, moth-proofing, harsh chemical dyes,
and other, often toxic, additives to finish the
fabric and garments. Chemical dyes frequently
include toxic heavy metals such as chrome, copper
and zinc, and sometimes contain known or suspected
carcinogens.
For the chemically sensitive and chemically
concerned consumer, beware of garments
manufactured with new fabric technologies that
boast of creating “smart wools” that will not
shrink and have high performance capabilities.
Many of these “unique and innovative properties”
are achieved through a combination of chemicals
and manufacturing processes which change the
structure of the wool fibers and utilize the
latest fabric technologies for processes such as
sliver backwashing and continuous chlorine
oxidization shrink resist systems. The chemically
sensitive should be cautious with new wool fiber
technologies such as Sportwool™, Woolscience™,
Sensory Perception Technology™ and Arcana™.
Prevention is better than cure.
As much as possible and appropriate, buy
organically grown wool and organically processed
wool garments and products. Organic wool is from
sheep that have been raised without synthetic or
harmful chemicals under healthy, natural, and
responsible animal husbandry methods which reduce
or eliminate the need for most agricultural
chemicals and promote healthy soils, air, and
waterways. The sheep are grazed on pesticide-free
land that is not over-grazed and are never sprayed
or dipped as is commonly practiced in conventional
sheep farming. Responsible organic animal
husbandry methods help raise sheep that have
healthy immune systems that are most resistant to
external and internal parasites.
Organic wool yarn is not chemically treated
during the entire production process, from the
farm to the finished garment or product. The raw
wool is scoured clean in an approved biodegradable
cleansing agent before being carded and spun at an
organic mill. This organic cotton sweater is the
Organic Wool Crew Neck Sweater from Patagonia.
Wool is a natural fiber and a renewable
resource that is non-allergenic. Organic wool can
be used extensively by those who normally suffer
from chemical sensitivity when in contact with
conventional grow wool. Sometimes those who
‘react’ to wool are actually displaying a reaction
to the harsh scouring agents, dyes and chemicals
used in conventional wool production and not the
wool itself.
Have you seen a Manx Loghtan recently?
If you are having trouble knowing your Balwen
from your Cotswold, visit
Garghenor Organic Pure Wool , home of
traditional and rare breeds of organic sheep.
Garghenor is located in Ceredigion, Wales. The
hilly countryside of Wales is home to an
astonishing variety of sheep. For centuries, sheep
have been a cornerstone of the economic and
cultural life in Wales.
When we think of wool, most
people think of wool from sheep, but wool also
comes from other animals such as alpacas. Alpaca
clothing is extremely healthy and comfortable
to wear. The absence of lanolin and other oils
in the fleece and its extraordinary fineness of
handle mean that alpaca garments are both
hypoallergenic and luxuriously soft on your skin.
When you put on an alpaca sweater, you will
immediately notice the absence of the scratchy
"prickle" found in garments made of more coarse
fiber.
Unlike other mono-color animal
fibers, alpacas produce fleece in more than 22
different colors. This amazing spectrum
delights hand spinners and industrial
manufacturers and reduces the need for dyeing,
which further protects and enhances the
resilience, softness, flexibility, and
hypoallergenic qualities of the fiber.
LotusOrganics.com offers a
large variety of pure organic wool sweaters and
jackets plus many wool and alpaca blends.
All have exceptional quality, purity and style.
Pure Wool for Ladies:
Marble Merino Cowl Neck Sweater.
Merino "Jean" Jacket
Merino Gallery Jacket
Merino Reversible Jacket
Petroglyph Zip Cardigan
Vintage Embroidered Jacket
Wine Country Jacket
Alpaca and Alpaca/Wool for
Ladies:
Alpaca Poncho
Alpaca Turtleneck
Alpaca Zip Front Vest
Pure Wool for Men:
Yukon Wool Jacket
Alpaca and Alpaca/Wool for Men:
Alpaca Wool Sweater
V-Neck Sweater
Wool Bedding:
Eco Wool Blanket
Click
here for a display of all
the fine wool and alpaca products from LotusOrganics.com.
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