Piñatex

Piñatex is a natural leather alternative made from cellulose fibres extracted from pineapple leaves, Piñatex was developed by Dr Carmen Hijosa and first presented at the PhD graduate exhibition at the Royal College of Art, London. Piñatex manufactured and distributed by Dr Hijosa's company Ananas Anam Ltd.[1]

Development

Piñatex began to be developed when Dr Hijosa was working as consultant in the leather goods industry in the Philippines in the 1990s. She observed the leather produced there by was poor quality, unsustainable for the environment and bad for the people involved in the industry.[2] Inspired by the barong tarong, a traditional transparent garment worn over shirts in the Philippines made of pineapple fibres Dr Hijosa spent seven years developing the product through a PhD at the Royal College of Art in London and joint collaborations with Bangor University in Wales, Northampton Leather Technology Center, Leitat technological Centre in Spain, alongside NonWoven Philippines Inc. in Manila, and Bonditex S.A., a textile finishing company in Spain.[2][3][4]

Production

Piñatex is created by felting pineapple leaf fibres together to create a non-woven substrate.[1][5] The pineapple industry globally produces 40,000 tonnes of waste pineapple leaves each year, which are usually left to rot or are burned.[1] Approximately 480 leaves (the waste from 16 pineapple plants) are needed to create 1 square metre of material. The material uses the long leaf fibres which are separated by the pineapple farmers for additional income, the leftover biomass from the process can be used as a fertilizer.[5][4][5][1]

Because Piñatex is produced from a waste product it requires no additional land, water, pesticides or fertilizers. It also avoids the use of formaldehyde and heavy metals used in animal leather production and has none of the wastage of leather caused by the shape of the animal's skin.[1][2]

Properties

Piñatex can be produced in different thicknesses, dyed a range of colours and finishes including a metallic finish. It can also printed on, stitched and treated to give different types of texture.[4] Piñatex is vegan and unlike petroleum based synthetic leather it is degradable.[2]

Uses

Piñatex is breathable and flexible and is suitable to create bags, shoes and accessories, seat coverings and other furnishings. The textile is being further developed for use in clothing.[5] Products have been produced by designer Ally Capellino, ROMBAUT and NaeVegan and prototypes have been created by Puma and Camper.[2][4]

Recognition

In 2016 Piñatex won the Arts Foundation UK award for Material Innovation and in 2015 Dr Hijosa was finalists of the Cartier Women's Initiative Awards.[6][1] Piñatex is a PETA certified vegan fashion label.[7]

External links

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/12/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.