Supplier: Banana fiber for disposable towel
New-type hot-connectivity composite fiber is made from different types of modified high molecular materials through advanced composite spining technology. It has unique characteristic of melting at low temperature, and after hot treatment, it can naturally adhere without use of binder, green and environmental. The product abides by strict sanitation control standards to achieve sanitation material grade. The products include ES fiber and ETS modified polyester composite staple fiber which is initiated by the company, and can be applied to production of surface layer and guide layer of disposable sanitary articles Functional characteristic the product is a kind of chemical blend provided with advantages of the two materials. ES fiber has low melting point on the superficial layer, soft, bouffant and pervious, while the core layer has certain intensity and fiber state. ETS fiber is provided with advantages of heat bonding, high hygroscopicity and antistatic property, etc. Application scope the sanitary products are applicable to hot air penetrating technology to produce surface layer and guide layer of disposable sanitary materials such as paper diaper and sanitary towel; the conventional low-melting fiber is applicable to production of hard cotton, decorative wall board, environmental mattress, seat mat, environmental filter media, constructional acoustic damping and heat insulation materials, etc. Specification 4D*51MMã??4D*32MM
Supplier: Qualities: 100% cotton, poly cotton, cvc, flannel, jersey, non woven, percale: cotton, pc, cvc t180 to t250.sateen: cotton, pc, cvc t180 to t400 (stripe, check, dobby), flannel: cotton, cvc different weights uniform: poplin, broad cloth, chambray (cross dyed) workwear: twill, duck, drill, different weight and widths terry towels, napkin, bathrobe, different weight dyed/white, non woven pp spounbound, mask, sanitizer, bottles, isolation suit, gloves, Bedding: Flat sheet, fitted sheet, pillow cases, duvet/quilt cover, mattress protector Fabric: Percale, Sateen, sateen stripe, Flannel, Jersey, Muslin, Twill, Microfabric Bath & terry: Bath towel, face towel, hand towel, wash cloth, Matt, Kitchen towel, Blend: 100% Cotton, Poly cotton, 100% Polyester, CVC Process: White, dyed, printed
GRADE: A Color: Gold brown Length of fibre: 5-25cm Weight: 100kg/bale Moisture: 18 - 20 % max Dust and impurity: 3% max Foreign matter: 5% (max) + Sub-standard fiber: 2% max. GRADE B Usage: Make coconut mattress, coir net, coconut rope, coconut twisted string Moisture: 18% (+/-2) max Impurity: 3-5% max Color: Yellow, brown Length: 5-25 cm Packing: Pressed in bale: 100-110 kgs/bale, steel wire strapping/plastic strapping Cont 20 ft: 7.00 - 8.40 MTS Cont 40 ft: 17.40 - 18.00 MTS
The banana fibre products are popular for their household utility use. These are items like laundry basket, office waste paper basket, and fruit or egg trays. There are also banana fibre products that serve as house deco. These are art scenes depicting African culture, animals, and nativity products. Of late, the Kikuyu ethnic women community from central province have introduced Banana fiber "Kiondo" basket. Unlike the sisal baskets, the banana fibre "kiondo" do not need any colouring. As for the hand woven banana fibre basketry, the producers are based in Central and western province and even in slum areas. 90% of banana fibre basketry producers are middle-aged women who make the banana basketry to supplement their sources of income. It is also an activity that instills a sense of belonging and security. Most of the producers lifetime dream is to educate their children and acquire or build a better house which has a security of tenure. Like in most slum areas, a majority of the women take both the role of the bread earner and house head. There are many reasons behind it such as having been widowed, divorced or even migrated from rural areas in search of greener pastures in Nairobi just to find themselves in the slum life. Traditionally unlike men, women do not have property right or inherit from their place of origin thus rural land. Therefore their best alternative is to adapt to urban slum life where basic social amenities are not only lacking but inadequate to serve the usually high population of maginalized citizens. The problems that face the slum community and their rural counterpart is poverty and unemployment. Many of the slum dwellers rely on unreliable source of income such as temporary construction work while their women combine their respective source of income with child rearing among other household chores. In order to fight the odds against them, women unlike men have formed their own Banana fibre groups. The common objective is to work as a team as a way of seeking recognition and to empower the group members. This is realised through networking with the powers that be. These women slum groups, source the banana fibre raw material from the rural areas where banana plant is grown. The fibre are collected from the garden while dry and later softened by soaking the fibre overnight before usage.