Mailbox Mondays Natural Fiber

Cloth Diaper Advice – Mailbox Mondays 1/28/13 – Charcoal Bamboo

charcoal bamboo #clothdiapers via @chgdiapers

Once a week, I address a reader submitted question, and ask my readers to chime in. Don’t miss any posts! Subscribe to our new RSS Feed or subscribe via email.

Questions don’t have to be cloth diaper related, just email maria at change-diapers.com with “Mailbox Mondays” in the subject, or fill out my contact form for readers, which you will always be able to find on my Contact Page.

Elizabeth asks:

Have you heard of charcoal liners?

Bamboo charcoal is created when older bamboo plants are heated. The powder is used to create charcoal bamboo fabric. Traditional “bamboo fabric” has been under fire for being falsely advertised as environmentally friendly, natural etc., when in fact the bamboo is processed into a rayon fabric that some think doesn’t retain any of the properties of bamboo.

Bamboo charcoal is broken into chips, then ground into a fine powder, which is compounded, then spun into yarn. The fabric is said to be porous, absorbent, odor absorbing, moisture wicking, anti bacterial and much more. I have only used charcoal bamboo inserts in Lil Helper Diapers, but I was quite pleased with it. It was super soft, absorbent, and the darker color hides stains.

I don’t know very much about the chemical process of making the fiber, but it is my understanding that the resulting “charcoal bamboo” fabric is a polyester, much like traditional “bamboo” fabric is in fact rayon.

Have you used charcoal bamboo?


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Maria
Maria is an aspiring "fit mom" of 3 children, writing about cloth diapers, going green, and her life as a single mom. Maria works with many companies within the cloth diaper industry and beyond, providing social media management, product development, and other services.
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