Over the past decade or so, consumers have been introduced to bamboo as a sustainable material that can be used in a wide array of products—from flooring and cutting boards, to socks, towels, clothing, and everything in between. Marketers have done a great job associating bamboo with a clean aesthetic and healthy lifestyle. And you’ve probably seen these types of benefits touted in various ads and packaging: “antimicrobial,” “renewable,” “odor resistant,” etc. On the face of it, bamboo sounds like a super-hero of a raw material.
The reality, however, is that bamboo’s use in fabric-based applications is neither environmentally friendly nor health promoting. Why not? Here are a few of the reasons:
1. There’s a 99% chance it’s not organic. Certified organic bamboo does exist, but it’s largely used in food, medicinal, and construction applications, not in textile production.
2. Turning bamboo into fabric is an extremely chemical-dependant process. It’s true that the growing of bamboo is relatively “clean;” pesticides are rarely needed. However, when it’s time to turn the raw bamboo into a fabric, highly intensive chemical processes come into play.
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has chastised companies for misleading customers and notes on its website:
“The soft textiles you see labeled ‘bamboo’ don’t contain any part of the bamboo plant. They are made from bamboo that has been processed into rayon using toxic chemicals.”
Yes, in order for bamboo pulp to be turned into fabric, it’s soaked in a toxic solvent (carbon disulfide) that can endanger factory workers as well as pollute the air. It is estimated that around 50% of the hazardous waste that results from bamboo rayon production goes directly into the environment.
3. It’s not doing your baby any favors. We know you want the best for your little ones, and unfortunately bamboo clothing, blankets, towels, and other textiles are not the answer. The processing of the raw bamboo destroys any antimicrobial characteristics that may have once existed, and you may be paying a premium for glorified, chemically treated rayon.
Here at Finn + Emma, we use only GOTS-certified 100% organic cotton, which hasn’t been exposed to harmful chemicals and allows your child the healthy, breathable comfort they deserve. Boo to bamboo, yea to organic cotton!
Share
2 comments
Very informative – thank you! I’ve heard people say before that they don’t really consider bamboo a “natural fiber” fabric and this helps explain why.
Thanks so much for this piece. I had no idea!
Join our newsletter
We’ll send free parenting and lifestyle tips straight to your inbox.
Getting a family to drink more water sounds like it should be simple. Water is everywhere, it costs almost nothing, and everyone knows it is good for them. And yet,...
Discovering that a prescription drug harmed your child causes immediate panic. You may soon face difficult questions about how the mistake happened. Knowing the correct actions protects your child and...
Discovering that a prescription drug harmed your child causes immediate panic. You may soon face difficult questions about how the mistake happened. Knowing the correct...
Moving quotes can feel like a mystery. You call three companies, get three different numbers, and have no idea if any of them are reasonable. Part of the confusion is...
Supplements for cognitive health should be judged by more than whether they make someone feel alert for an hour. Focus, memory, mental stamina, visual endurance, stress resilience, and sleep quality...
Supplements for cognitive health should be judged by more than whether they make someone feel alert for an hour. Focus, memory, mental stamina, visual endurance,...
We work in fashion, and most of us reach for a dress in the morning before we consider anything else. Not because we are lazy about getting dressed, but because...
Before you test any communication platform, there’s a simple question worth asking: does it make chatting easier without making safety worse? That’s the real balance. It also matters more than...
Before you test any communication platform, there’s a simple question worth asking: does it make chatting easier without making safety worse? That’s the real balance....
2 comments
Very informative – thank you! I’ve heard people say before that they don’t really consider bamboo a “natural fiber” fabric and this helps explain why.
Thanks so much for this piece. I had no idea!