Eugene

Regular price
/

Eugene


About

Eugene is American grown fiber hemp (zero residual THC or other psycho-active chemicals), woven in the US.


Eco Facts

The American mill that wove Eugene, like most American mills, rejected the idea of getting certified by Oeko-Tex (They could not qualify for GOTS). Sadly, this decision follows a trend in the USA where producers insist that just being produced in the US is the equivalent of being Oeko-Tex 100 certified. This belief is very far from the truth. For just a few of the many many chemicals used in textile production which also REMAIN in the fabrics, a look at just a few of them and how the US government and Oeko-Tex 100 certification stack up reveals:

Chemical or Chemical Class

Does Oeko-Tex limit or prohibit?

Does the US Government limit or prohibit?
All flame retardants

Yes, prohibited

No
Carcinogenic and allergy-inducing dyes

Yes

No
Chlorinated phenols

Yes

No
Chloro-organic benzenes and toluenes

Yes

No
Heavy metals:  Lead

Yes

YES, but limit is 100 times weaker than Oeko-Tex
Heavy metals:  Antimony

Yes

No
Heavy metals: Cadmium

Yes

No
Heavy metals: Arsenic

Yes

No
Organotin compounds (TBT and DBT)

Yes

No
Formaldehyde

Yes

No
Pthalates, like BPA

Yes, the entire class of many chemicals

No, not in fabric. It does regulate 5 chemicals in this huge class but not in fabric – only in toys and child care products like teething rings.

For the complete picture, please visit our blog post, FabricsellerA.


The Fabric Name

Eugene, Oregon, home to The University of Oregon, is on the Willamette River, close to both mountains and the Pacific Ocean.


Uses

Curtains, shirts and dresses, nightgowns, tabletop.

Specifications

  • abrasion test results: Not an upholstery fabric.
  • care: Washable in any temperature, although Eugene will shrink 10% the first time it is soaked in hot temperatures.
  • content: 100% American Grown hemp
  • directionality: Non-directional
  • weight: 7.0 oz yd2 / 238 gm m2
  • width: 54" / 137 cm

Why choose us?

We've done the work for you

Over the years, Patty and Leigh Anne dedicated tons of time researching ethical and sustainable production—how it’s done, and what the implications are to us (and to all living things)  and to our planet.  They even put it in their mission statement, a goal “to change the way textiles are being made” – kind of a reach for such an upstart little company, right? 

You may also like