You are interested in color analysis drapes, uncomplicated to use, hard-wearing, easy to care for and you are now wondering which material is better: cotton or synthetics?

Natural materials have the nimbus of originality and ecology. But what would all of sportswear be without the innovative synthetic materials, breathable and always with the light elegance of the smooth surface? According to our motto “we underline your professionalism with innovative products”, we deliberately chose synthetics for the production of our drapes (and fabric color swatches). Why?

  1. Easier analysis: It’s about the effect of colors on your customer’s face. The slight sheen of our drapes supports this effect – in contrast to dull cotton towels.
  2. Less weight: Cotton is significantly heavier. With cloth sets with up to 72 cloths this matters. Not only when putting on and turning the drapes on the customer, but also during transport.
  3. Easier cleaning: Do you know that: you wash cotton and unfortunately have to find that the good piece has lost its color and shape? Even after tenth of washes, our material remains true to color and shape like at the beginning. If you don’t like creasing and ironing, then keep your hands off cotton. Our synthetics can also be ironed, but here the iron glides easily over the fabric.
  4. Higher UV resistance: The printing inks of our drapes have better light resistance. Cheap cotton fabrics from Asia can usually not keep up.
  5. High color fidelity: Our cloths are not dyed through, but printed. In one of the most modern printing process with minimal error tolerance. This guarantees maximum color fidelity from edition to edition, which can hardly be achieved at affordable prices with changing batches of dyed-through fabrics.
  6. No hem: Synthetics can be hot cut, i.e. when cutting, the edges merge and do not need a seam or hem. This makes handling our cloths particularly pleasant.
  7. Better environmental balance: Many cotton fabrics are produced under precarious conditions: children for the cotton harvest and processing, ecologically questionable dyes and disposal of the leached dye broth. On the other hand, the printing of synthetics is ecologically “minimally invasive”, is remunerated according to tariff and, thanks to our product facilities in Germany, is subject to the strict local environmental guidelines.

Conclusion: “Jute instead of plastic” is a commendable maxim, but less conclusive in the working world than you think.

Image: Pixabay