When you're shopping for a little one, you want to buy the best. Thats why bamboo fabric baby clothes are a failsafe choice. The combination of super softness and durability is ideal for playtime & sleep, plus the fabric is sustainable, breathable and thermoregulating to be gentle on their skin and kinder to our planet. Read on to see why theres more to this plant than simply being a pandas favourite snack.
With competitive price and timely delivery, UNIMETONE sincerely hope to be your supplier and partner.
The top 4 benefits of bamboo clothing:
Bamboo viscose fabric is just as soft as silk (maybe even softer depending on who you talk to!). A product such as our baby blanket is made by using long strands stretched across the blanket's entire length, eliminating any rough fibers. Bamboo fibers also get softer and softer the more its washed, which is perfect for little ones who always get messy.
Bamboo is one of the fastest-growing woody plants in the world, making it a natural, sustainable, and renewable resource. As well as growing fast, bamboo forests are very dense meaning they require less space. In order to make our organic viscose bamboo clothing, we use a closed-loop process so all the water & solvents are re-used again and again to minimize water demands and pollution. The use of viscose in the blend increases the durability of the fabric & therefore the lifetime of our clothing.
A babys skin can be surprisingly sensitive, which is why we started creating bamboo baby clothes. Rashes are one of the most common skin conditions for little ones and bamboo fabrics can help to soothe them. The fabric has the incredible ability to wick moisture away from their skin in order to keep the rash clean and dry so it heals quickly.
Bamboo viscose fabric is exceptionally breathable and efficient in venting excess heat and moisture away from the body. This means that even in hot weather little ones are able to naturally regulate their temperature to keep them from overheating. Due to the structure and breathability of bamboo, air is able to flow freely through the fabric so their body temperature is able to regulate against the outside temperature keeping them warm when its cold too. Thats why we use it in our famous sleepwear & sleep sacks.
Frequently Asked Questions about Bamboo Fabric
As bamboo is still a relatively new material to use in clothing, its only fair that youll have some questions about it. Here we try to answer the most common ones we get from our customers:
Viscose is a generalized term for regenerated cellulose fibers from plants, such as eucalyptus, beech, or in our case bamboo. Bamboo viscose is made from the cellulose of bamboo plants. The green shoots are harvested and cut into chunks of raw bamboo. These chips are then soaked in a solution to soften them, this is where our manufacturers use a closed-loop process so all the liquid is recycled and the solvents are captured & removed from the pulp.
All of our clothing is made to last & its environmental journey continues with you. We recommend washing our bamboo (and other) pieces at 86 degrees with similar colors. Due to the stretchy nature of the fabric, it may shrink a little after washing, if so, gently pull it back into shape whilst damp. Bamboo can be tumble-dried & ironed on low too.
Bamboo yarns are long & strong which makes garments more durable. However, because we dont use extra chemicals to stabilize the fabric to keep it as natural as possible, you may notice slight bobbling with initial use. This is due to the longer yarns which continue to stick to the garment rather than falling off. Slight pilling is normal for natural fibers, but can be prevented through proper care (including ironing or using a lint remover) & doesnt impact the durability or the softness of the clothing.
Whilst it is true that most bamboo textile products are made using environmentally toxic chemicals, our bamboo from viscose fabric is manufactured in a closed-loop process with non-harmful chemicals. This process doesnt chemically alter the structure of the cellulose and the non-toxic solvents used can be reused over and over again without entering the waste system.
Bamboo is more sustainable than cotton in the way that its grown, however, this makes it much more expensive. Thats why our unique signature fabric is a blend of both organic cotton & bamboo from viscose. We chose organic cotton as not only is it softer than regular cotton, but also grown using methods with a low environmental impact. Discover our organic cotton daywear too.
Whilst silk might be the most luxurious fabric on the planet, unlike bamboo, its not breathable or thermoregulating. Bamboo is also much easier to take of since it can be machine washed regularly without wearing out. Last but by no means least, theres the cost to contend with. Whilst bamboo fabrics arent cheap, a high-quality piece will cost you much less than the same quality of silk.
Bamboo repels common allergens such as dust mites by wicking away moisture (particularly useful at bedtime). This drop in water creates an inhospitable environment for dust mites and bacteria, therefore, reducing their chances of survival.
To sum up, bamboo is a pretty incredible fabric. It is kind to our planet when manufactured responsibly, gentle on the skin, easy to care for and comfortable to wear all year round.
As amazing as it seems, bamboo, like any other fabric isnt perfect, there are some disadvantages to using bamboo materials.
Baby Pajamas
If you are looking for more details, kindly visit Bamboo Baby Clothes Wholesale.
Sleep Sacks
Bodysuits
Baby Blanket
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To be pregnant for the first time is to be the worlds most anxious, needy, and ignorant consumer all at once. Good luck buying a pile of stuff whose uses are still hypothetical to you! What, for instance, is the best sleep sack? When I was four months pregnant and still barely aware of the existence of sleep sacks, a mom giving recommendations handed me one made of bamboo. Feelsoooo soft, she said. I reached out to caress, and it really was soooo soft. This was my introduction to the cult of bamboo.
Over the next several months, gifts of bamboo clothing from more experienced parent friends started to arrive, and I became indoctrinated in its superiority. Bamboo is breathable, I was told, smooth, and so stretchy that it grows with your kid. I heard of moms who exclusively dressed their babies in bamboo. One night after my baby was born, while high on hormones and low on sleep, I wanted to splurge on something nice. Add to cart: $33 for a pair of bamboo pajamas in the color blush. Yes, this was more than Ive spent on my own adult pajamas. But these were bamboo.
Thirty-three dollars, I would later learn, is a relatively, uhh, reasonable price to pay for bamboo baby clothes? The Instagram brands that popularized bamboo for babies have also perfected the art of scarcity-induced demand: Every so often, they drop limited-edition prints that can sell out in minutes. So intense is the competition that moms resell them on Facebook for three, five, even 10 times the retail price; one confessed to reselling a $98 blanket for $1,000.
This all seemed a bit much to me, but let she whose baby is without bamboo cast the first stone. Imagine my surprise, though, when I committed the act of serious investigative journalism that is reading a clothing label. The magical, buttery soft bamboo fabric that so many moms have been obsessing over? Its rayon. Yes, rayon, the material best known as what cheap blouses are made of. Rebranded as bamboo, rayon has taken on an improbable second life as the stuff of premium, collectible baby clothes.
There is nothing particularly special about rayon made from bamboo. Bamboo rayon is just rayon, Ajoy Sarkar, a textiles expert at the Fashion Institute of Technology, told me. And there is no reason this material should inspire so much hoopla. The world is insane, said Preeti Gopinath, a textiles expert at the Parsons School of Design, not at all suppressing a laugh when I told her about the hype over bamboo for babies.
And what exactly is rayon? It is neither natural like cotton nor synthetic like polyester. Rayon is in-between, a semisynthetic material made of the cellulose extracted from plants. A century ago, manufacturers used wood as feedstock, but these days they also use bamboo. The basic process used to make most rayon is still the same: The plant material is treated with lye and a chemical called carbon disulfide, which turns any cellulose into a viscous syrup that can be extruded into long, thin strands. Carbon disulfide is especially toxic, known to cause dizziness, vision problems, even psychosis in workers without proper protection (but it shouldnt remain in the finished product). This entire process of turning bamboo into rayon is energy and chemical intensive, which makes sense. When I see hard stalks of bamboo, I dont immediately think soft or silky. Bamboo might sound natural, says Maxine Bédat, the founder and director of the sustainable-fashion think tank New Standard Institute, but the fabric is highly processed. The end product is the same regardless of starting material. But no one is out there hawking expensive wood chip baby clothing.
These days, manufacturers can make rayon exceptionally soft by finely tuning the way the cellulose fibers are extruded. This feat of engineering turns wood or bamboo into fabric that does, in fact, feel nice enough to lay against baby skin. Some moms seek out the softness of bamboo specifically to keep their babies eczema at bay. (Cotton and rayon are both recommended for eczema.) The material is also absorbent and cool, particularly comfortable for warm weather. But rayon is a weak fiber, Sarkar told me. When rubbed together, the fibers tend to break and curla.k.a. pillingwhich explains why bamboo baby clothes come with unrealistically fussy laundry instructions: line dry, lay flat to dry. Who has time when your newborn is pooping on three outfits a day? I tossed it all in the dryer, and sure enough, the bamboo clothing started to pill.
I did, however, continue marveling at the stretch in the bamboosorry, I mean rayonpajamas. I found myself reaching for them over cotton ones because they were simply easier to stuff my babys ever-chunkier thighs into. But rayon isnt inherently that stretchy, Gopinath told me. The stretch in bamboo baby clothes comes from the 3 to 5 percent of spandex blended into their fabric; 100 percent cotton clothes obviously contain no spandex. Manufactured rayon is very cheapusually cheaper than cottonso you can add a little bit of spandex and it will still be cheaper than a cotton-spandex blend, Sarkar said. This is not what I wanted to hear after spending $33 on already pilling baby pajamas.
The cost of fabric is, of course, only a small fraction of the price of any garment. When were paying for bamboo, were not just paying for the bamboo. Were paying for exclusivity. Were paying for the feeling that weve made the right choice for our helpless little babies. Were paying for the softness of fabric against sensitive baby skin, even if that means clothing so delicate, it cant go through standard wash and dry cycles. Were paying for breathability that keeps babies warm but not too warm, which is a risk factor for the terrifying prospect of SIDS. The stakes can feel very high, and were trying our best. Is our best really rayon? Hmm, sounds better to call it bamboo.
The bamboo brands arent exactly keeping their use of rayon a deep secret. Its right there on the clothing labels and on websites touting the superiority of bamboo. But you also wouldnt necessarily know from a casual perusal of their marketing copy, especially when they use the more obscure name of viscose. (Viscose is technically just one kind of rayon, but its by far the most common, so the terms are used more or less interchangeably.) You would think bamboo is luxe, exclusive, and so natural. Outside of the world of baby clothes, the Federal Trade Commission last year fined Kohls and Walmart $2.5 million and $3 million, respectively, over their bogus marketing of so-called bamboo sheets, towels, and rugs. Its just rayon, the FTC contended, and they had to call it such.
So, if youre looking, I have some used rayon baby clothes to sell you.
If you want to learn more, please visit our website Newborn Baby Clothes Wholesale.