Camira creates colourful Oceanic fabrics from recycled plastic bottles
Dezeen promotion: British textile company Camira has created fabrics that contain recycled plastic collected from oceans and beaches.
Camira's Oceanic range has a twill weave comprising a light warp and a deeply saturated weft.
Up to 50 per cent of the fibres are created from recycled plastic bottles that were sourced from the Mediterranean sea and beaches as part of the SEAQUAL Initiative ? an organisation that works to combat marine plastic pollution by collecting and processing bottles.
"For every two kilograms (four metres) of oceanic fabric sold, one kilogram of waste is removed from the ocean," said Camira. "One metre of fabric equates to 26 plastic bottles."
The SEAQUALÂ Initiative processes marine plastic and post-consumer plastic bottles diverted from landfill to make the yarn. The waste is washed, shredded into a mixture and then extruded into chips. The fibres are treated into yarn and texturised, before being sent to Camira's factory in Huddersfield, England.
Oceanic comprises 16 shades in total, ranging from neutrals to pastels and bolder options. Colours include soft yellow, turquoise, bright red and sage green.
Camira was founded in 1974 and is based in Mirfield, West Yorkshire. It has six factories, five of which are in the UK and one in Lithuania.
Oceanic is the latest in a series of recycled textiles that Camira has produced in the past 20 years, beginning with a wool fabric made from old jumpers called ReSKU.
"We've alway...
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