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(c) MUNICHFABRICSTART Exhibitions GmbH
31.03.2022

VIEW Premium Selection feiert Comeback

Am 21. und 22. Juni 2022 begrüßt die VIEW Premium Selection Autumn.Winter 23/24 die Textil- und Fashionbranche im Münchner MVG Museum.

Die VIEW Premium Selection steht seit jeher als Preview Textilfachmesse für neueste Entwicklungen, erste Farb- und Materialtendenzen und die Präsentation eines selektierten, hochwertigen Produktportfolios in persönlicher und professioneller Atmosphäre.

Zum frühestmöglichen Termin werden rund 250 Kollektionen für Autumn.Winter 23/24 in den Bereichen FABRICS, ADDITIONALS, DESIGN STUDIOS sowie DENIM und SPORTSWEAR auf der VIEW präsentiert. Hervorzuheben ist dabei die Internationalität der diesjährigen Aussteller, die neben Deutschland, Italien und der Türkei auch aus Frankreich, England, Griechenland, Spanien, Dänemark, Hong Kong, China und Japan kommen.

Am 21. und 22. Juni 2022 begrüßt die VIEW Premium Selection Autumn.Winter 23/24 die Textil- und Fashionbranche im Münchner MVG Museum.

Die VIEW Premium Selection steht seit jeher als Preview Textilfachmesse für neueste Entwicklungen, erste Farb- und Materialtendenzen und die Präsentation eines selektierten, hochwertigen Produktportfolios in persönlicher und professioneller Atmosphäre.

Zum frühestmöglichen Termin werden rund 250 Kollektionen für Autumn.Winter 23/24 in den Bereichen FABRICS, ADDITIONALS, DESIGN STUDIOS sowie DENIM und SPORTSWEAR auf der VIEW präsentiert. Hervorzuheben ist dabei die Internationalität der diesjährigen Aussteller, die neben Deutschland, Italien und der Türkei auch aus Frankreich, England, Griechenland, Spanien, Dänemark, Hong Kong, China und Japan kommen.

Vor Ort werden Bellandi, Dynamo, E. Miroglio, Lisa Spa, Manteco, Max Müller, Agentur Püttmann, Set und Tejidos Royo neben zahlreichen weiteren Herstellern sein. Erstmals auf der VIEW vertreten sind die zukunftsweisenden Vorstufen-Anbieter We Nordic, Knopf und Knopf, Le Studio Copenhagen, Thermore und Kipas, die die VIEW zur Informations- und Inspirationsgrundlage für die kommende Saison machen.

Die Textil- und Fashion-Branche ist außerdem herzlich zur nächsten MUNICH FABRIC START Autumn.Winter 23/24 vom 30.08. - 01.09.22 im MOC München und zur BLUEZONE vom 30. – 31.08.22 auf dem Zenith Areal eingeladen. An zwei bzw. drei Tagen warten Informationen, physischer Austausch und Innovationsgeist sowie ein neues SOURCING Show-in-Show Konzept auf die globalen Player der Industrie.

Quelle:

MUNICHFABRICSTART Exhibitions GmbH

Key role for Kipaş in the EU’s multi-million New Cotton Project (c) Monforts
The New Cotton Project logo
30.11.2020

Key role for Kipaş in the EU’s multi-million New Cotton Project

  • Monforts customer Kipaş has been selected as the sole denim manufacturing partner in the €6.7 million European Union-funded New Cotton Project, involving the brands adidas and H&M, working in a consortium with suppliers, innovators and research institutes.

Kipaş, based in Kahramanmaraş, Turkey, is currently installing its third Monforts Montex stenter along with a third Monfortex compressive shrinkage system in a combined configuration dedicated to denim production.

This follows the successful installation and commissioning of the second Montex and Monfortex lines at the Kahramanmaraş plant in 2018, which Kipaş Vice Chairman of the Board Ahmet Öksüz said had immediately exceeded expectations.

  • Monforts customer Kipaş has been selected as the sole denim manufacturing partner in the €6.7 million European Union-funded New Cotton Project, involving the brands adidas and H&M, working in a consortium with suppliers, innovators and research institutes.

Kipaş, based in Kahramanmaraş, Turkey, is currently installing its third Monforts Montex stenter along with a third Monfortex compressive shrinkage system in a combined configuration dedicated to denim production.

This follows the successful installation and commissioning of the second Montex and Monfortex lines at the Kahramanmaraş plant in 2018, which Kipaş Vice Chairman of the Board Ahmet Öksüz said had immediately exceeded expectations.

“We performed a very thorough technical investigation based on the latest Industry 4.0 analysis before the purchase, to determine what we needed, and the Monforts technology met all our requirements,” he said, in an interview with Textilegence magazine. “The Monfortex is equipped with a variety of features not found on classical shrinkage machines and the production can be monitored from beginning to end. It also exceeded our expectations in energy cost savings.”

Kipaş subsequently received a special certificate from Monforts in recognition of its exceptional utilisation of the technology to its full potential.

The latest Montex stenter now being installed at Kipaş is a 12-chamber unit with a working width of 2 metres featuring all of the latest automation features. The Monfortex unit, also with a working width of 2 metres, is in a ‘double rubber’ configuration, comprising two compressive shrinkage units and two felt calenders in line. This allows the heat setting of elastane fibres and the residual shrinkage of the denim to be carried out simultaneously, for a significant increase in production speeds.

“Around 90-95% of denim fabric production now contains elastane fibres and the Monforts system has allowed us to simultaneously increase our production and quality in this respect,” Mr Öksüz said.

Regenerated cotton
For the next three years within the New Cotton Project, Kipaş will manufacture denim fabrics based on the cellulose-based fibres of Infinited Fiber Company of Finland, made from post-consumer textile waste that has been collected, sorted and regenerated.

The patented technology of Infinited, which is leading the consortium of 12 companies, turns cellulose-rich textile waste into fibres that look and feel like cotton.

“We are very excited and proud to lead this project which is breaking new ground when it comes to making circularity in the textile industry a reality,” said Infinited co-founder and CEO Petri Alava. “The enthusiasm and commitment with which the entire consortium has come together to work towards a cleaner, more sustainable future for fashion is truly inspiring.”

Take-back programmes
Adidas and H&M will establish take-back programmes to collect the clothing that is produced, to determine the next phase in their lifecycle. Clothing that can no longer be worn will be returned to Infinited, for regeneration into new fibres, further contributing to a circular economy in which textiles never go to waste, but instead are reused, recycled or turned into new garments.

The aim is to prove that circular, sustainable fashion can be achieved today, and to act as an inspiration and stepping stone to further, even bigger circular initiatives by the industry going forward.

The EU has identified the high potential for circularity within the textile industry, while simultaneously highlighting the urgent need for the development of technologies to produce and design sustainable and circular bio-based materials. Making sustainable products commonplace, reducing waste and leading global efforts on circularity are outlined in the European Commission’s Circular Economy Action Plan.

Fashion brands produce nearly twice as many clothes today as they did 20 years ago and demand is expected to continue growing. At the same time, the equivalent of one garbage truck of textiles is landfilled or burned every second. Most of the textile industry’s environmental problems relate to the raw materials used by the industry – cotton, fossil-based fibres such as polyester, and viscose as the most common man-made cellulosic fibre, are all associated with serious environmental concerns.