LATEST UPDATE

Early Smart Textiles Reshape How Clothing Functions as a Platform for Sensing and Health Monitoring

Researchers traced the evolution of wearable technology from an early smart shirt developed for battlefield monitoring to current textile- and skin-based approaches used in hospital, rehabilitation and assistive contexts. The work showed how fabrics and epidermal interfaces could collect, process and deliver data unobtrusively, supporting applications ranging from patient monitoring to navigation support and injury prevention.

Other Updates
Top Stories
 
CIRCULARITY / RECYCLING / SECONDS / WASTE

Discarded Mussel Shells Can Replace Garnet Abrasives in Industrial Denim Sandblasting Processes, Study Finds

Researchers from the University of the Basque Country have demonstrated that ground mussel shells can function as an effective and more sustainable abrasive for denim sandblasting. The study shows the waste-derived material delivers comparable abrasion to garnet, reduces material consumption through reuse, and avoids environmental and health drawbacks linked to traditional finishing methods.

 
FLASHPOINT: CLIMATE
GHG Emissions / Localisation

Locally produced circular sportswear could have a smaller environmental footprint than a conventional polyester garment reference, a new lifecycle and microfibre assessment has modelled. Renewable-energy use, shorter transport routes, and circular design choices together could reduce climate impacts and microplastic emissions, the researchers have contended.

Climate Action / WRAP Roadmap

Climate action NGO WRAP has unveiled a new UK Textiles Pact Roadmap to fast-track circularity and environmental progress across the industry. Despite per-tonne cuts in carbon and water use, soaring production volumes and linear business models threaten to erase those gains. The Roadmap strengthens collaboration, targets upstream emissions, and supports policy reforms for a resilient circular future.

 
 
 
FOCUS: COTTON

‘MSP Isn’t Distorting Prices’: CCI Head on Imports, Yields, and the Road to Cotton Stability

The single largest cotton trading company and a public sector undertaking under the Union Ministry of Textiles, the Cotton Corporation of India (CCI), established in 1970, undertakes price support and commercial purchase operations to safeguard the economic interest of farmers in the cotton growing regions and to ensure its smooth supply to the textile industry. A Q&A with its Chairman-Cum-Managing Director, Lalit Kumar Gupta.

 
 
 
SPOTLIGHT EDITIONS: SELECT 4
 
 

"Quote Unquote"

Swapneshu Baser
Swapneshu Baser
Managing Director
Deven Supercriticals Pvt Ltd
The central engineering challenge was not making an existing dyeing process faster but eliminating the fundamental reasons why both conventional and prior-art CO₂ dyeing processes are slow. In conventional water-based dyeing, time is consumed by diffusion-limited exhaustion, repeated baths, fixation, washing, and multiple auxiliary chemical steps.

"Quote Unquote"

Mekdes Mesfin
Mekdes Mesfin
Founder and Creative Director
Demii Design
One of the biggest challenges is competing with the speed and pricing of mass production. Handwoven fabrics require time, patience, and craftsmanship—qualities that often clash with the fast-paced rhythm of today’s fashion market. Another major challenge is the shortage of modern equipment that could enhance the quality and consistency of the weavers’ work. Many artisans rely on outdated tools, which limits their potential to meet larger-scale or high-end production demands.
 
FOCUS: LEATHER

India’s Leather Industry Repositions as Global Buyers Converge on Kolkata

Kolkata’s hosting of AILPA 2025 represented more than an industry event—it symbolised India’s recalibration within shifting global trade currents. Amid market disruptions and evolving tariff landscapes, the city emerged as a key platform connecting manufacturers and international buyers, highlighting the sector’s growing capability, design sophistication, and readiness for the premium export market.