It will be first be published as an ebook PDF with embedded videos, all on a DVD. Those who wish printed copies will have to sign up for a subscription. It's a full-color book, and printing will be very expensive--about $30, plus the cost of the DVDs, shipping, and so on. A subscription with a down-payment will allow me to actually pay for the printing.
Right now, it looks like I will be finished with the text by the end of the year. Then it has to be tech-edited, copy-edited, laid out, proofed, and the videos created. I am aiming for publication somewhere between April and June.
In the meantime, I know that many readers don't spin, but half the book talks about various fibers. And so, here's is the first of several excerpts that I will be putting on this blog. All the images and spinning info have been removed here due to length considerations, but I hope you enjoy this brief tour of.....
Eco-Junk
According to me (it's my book, after all), A Green Object is one in which the entire process, from start to finish, involves methodology safe to
living beings—plants or animals. Sustainability doesn't make something
Eco-Friendly, as anyone who has lived—and died young—near a paper mill could
tell you if they were still alive to give an opinion. Furthermore, biodegradablity
does not make something Eco-Friendly. Some nerve gas agents degrade naturally
after a few days, mammoth bones survive for thousands of years. Draw your own
conclusions.
With that definition in mind, let’s take a tour of
supposedly Eco-Friendly fibers.
Bamboo
Bamboo is frankly my least favorite fiber. Aside from its
lack of elasticity, it has an unpleasant scritchy feeling while being spun that
is reminiscent of squealing chalk-on-a-blackboard. It’s also an ecological
disaster. Like most rayons, bamboo is a regenerated cellulosic fiber. The most
common production method, called the Viscose Process, incorporates corrosive
chemicals such as carbon disulfide, sodium hydroxide and sulfuric acid. Aside
from the direct effects on workers, successful disposal of these chemicals
poses yet another set of knotty problems. And do think about the fact that most
of this stuff is made in countries that have a less enlightened view of worker
and environmental safety than we do.
A second method, the Lyocell process, is touted as being
more ecologically friendly. This process, which is also used to make Tencel®,
uses N-methylmorpholine-N-oxide (NMMO) as a solvent to dissolve the bamboo
cellulose into a viscose solution. This chemical is a hazardous irritant for
skin contact and has some corrosive potential, as well. Inhalation is not a
good idea either, as the chemical produces severe irritation of the respiratory
tract. Repeated or prolonged exposure can damage organs. And so on.
Finally, there is actually an eco-friendly enzymatic process
that produces a yarn known as bamboo
linen. It involves crushing the woody parts of the bamboo plant and using
natural enzymes to break the bamboo walls into a mush that can be mechanically
combed out and spun into yarn. This is essentially the same process used to
produce linen from flax and other bast fibers. Very little bamboo linen is
actually manufactured, because the process is very labor intensive and costly.
Bamboo is often touted as having antimicrobial properties.
Untreated bamboo fabric actually doesn’t have any such
effect, but inventing this feature makes for a good marketing. Go here to
read all about it.
Given all these factors, why has bamboo become a standard
addition to batts and tops? Well, it is shiny, and is thus considered a cheap
substitute for silk. There is no substitute for silk, whose glorious properties
I have already discussed.
Avoid it, and whine to battmeisters who toss the stuff into
a perfect good batch of merino.
Soy Fiber
Those who know me well also know how much I dislike tofu—a
squishy flavorless food with all the gustatory charm of wallpaper paste. I
spent years avoiding it in Japan,
and trust me, that’s like trying to avoid grits in North
Georgia. Come to think of it, grits rate about the same in my
culinary book.I do love
soybeans themselves, though. Delicious! Adorable!
Soybean fiber is made from tofu manufacturing leftovers.
Proteins are extracted from the residual oils, which is turned into a liquid
goo, cooked, wet-spun, stabilized by acetylating, curled, thermoformed, and cut
into three- to four-inch staple lengths. Several sites cheerfully describe the
process this way: “the soy protein is liquefied then extruded into fiber in a
chemical free process.”
Aside from having an abysmal understanding of punctuation,
the person who wrote this clearly slept through high school chemistry; acetylation
is a chemical process. A few of the non-chemicals used include acetic
anhydride, acetic acid, and sulfuric acid, the same chemical-free chemicals
that bamboo rayon manufacturers insist are Green!
We can skip over the acids, because everyone has a good idea
of what these do to animate and inanimate objects, so let’s investigate acetic
anhydride. According to the CDC’s NIOSH Pocket Guide to Chemical Hazards, exposure to this
stuff causes:
conjunctivitis,
lacrimation (discharge of tears), corneal edema, opacity, photophobia (abnormal
visual intolerance to light); nasal, pharyngeal irritation; cough, dyspnea
(breathing difficulty), bronchitis; skin burns, vesiculation, and sensitization
dermatitis
According to the eco-crap I
found on various sites, it supposedly possesses the softness of cashmere, and
has the moisture absorption of cotton with better diffusion, making it
“comfortable and sanitary.” In actual fact, it looks, feels, and spins just like bamboo rayon with the same annoying scritchy texture.
Corn Fiber
Sigh. Another Green Fiber made from a non-chemical chemical process.
This one was a toughie, because the vague description of the manufacturing
process made it difficult to figure out how it’s really manufactured. The
primary consumer fiber, Ingeo, is the trademark name for NatureWorks
LLC's synthetic fiber made from corn.
The site has a really pretty biocycle diagram showing
sunshine, corn plants, and some chemical marbles on sticks. Reading between the
lines and referring to some rather esoteric organic chemistry websites (But Ha!
I have a BS in Physical Chemistry), I tweezed out the following explanation: Corn
fiber is a bioplastic spun from lactic acid generated by bacterial fermentation
of corn sugars. That’s certainly sounds green.
Now we get to the good part: The lactic acid molecules link
together to form rings called lactic monomers, which, in turn, open and link
together to form long chains of polylactide polymers, which are then made into
a plastic. Notice they don’t tell you how this part is actually performed.
Next, I chased down polylactides--polyesters derived from
corn, sugarcane, and tapioca. Ah. Good old polyesters, which, among other
things, use concentrated sulfuric acid or dry hydrogen chloride gas for the
esterification process. BLAAAATTTT. Not Green.
Milk Fiber
The active ingredient of milk fiber is casein, a protein
that’s been around since ancient times. It’s been found on various ancient
Chinese and Egyptian artifacts and those who live in New England will be familiar with antiques coated in milk paint. Milk fiber was developed in the 1930’s and was
used as a wool substitute during WWII. It’s basically casein that has been
dissolved in an alkali bath, then processed in such a way that it can be blown
out of spinnerets—plates with zillions of tiny holes—where the liquid casein
then solidifies into fiber with the help of such friendly chemicals as strong
acids and formaldehyde.
After the war, the explosion of synthetics caused milk fiber
to fall out of favor. Thanks to the Eco-Junk movement, it’s experiencing a
minor renaissance. The newer process uses acrylonitrile, a human carcinogen,
which is bound to the casein, to produce a non-carcinogenic fiber. Among other
things, acrylonitrile is the primary ingredient of acrylic fiber, which will
not, under any circumstances, be discussed further in this book.
In any case, those who point to milk fiber as green and
eco-friendly should go take a good look at the eco-chemical properties of acrylonitrile and get
back to me.
So, milk fiber is sort of like rayon, which we have already
decided is liquefied plant goo shot through spinnerets. However, milk, being an
animal product, produces a fiber that dyes like wool and spins something like
silk.
Crab(Chitosan )
Another fiber touted as eco-friendly and antibacterial,
chitosan is derived from shellfish carapaces and, oddly enough, mushrooms.
According to various websites, chitosan
has “scientifically proved biocompatibility,” and is “an absolutely safe
material.”
Chitosan itself is not useful to spinners, but let’s
look at Crabyon©, a blend of chitosan and
viscose, which should tip you off immediately about the chemicals used to
manufacture it. Refer to the Section on Bamboo for a complete
rundown of viscose rayon.
I am so sorry to disappoint seafood fans, but I was unable
to obtain a sample of this stuff. However, that won’t stop me from including it
in this section. I remember handling a skein of it a few years ago and thought
it felt like cotton with an odd squeaky texture.
I understand that people with shellfish allergies sometimes
have a reaction to the yarn, which makes it not “absolutely safe.” I
haven’t seen it around in a while, so perhaps the manufacturer rethought the
concept.
On the bright side, chitosan might fight fat, supposedly by
reducing lipid absorption, which means that if you manage to find crab fiber,
you can eat it and lose weight if you decide you don’t like to spin it.