05.01.16
TJ Beall
Booth 1825
TJ Beall Company will exhibit several new exciting advancements for its TrueCotton brand of fibers for nonwovens. First, for those FMCG customers concerned with the “natural” color of un-bleached cotton fibers, Beall will display its new line of whiter cotton fibers for the industry. These fibers are many shades whiter than the traditional line of TrueCotton and can be blended with white thermoplastics, rendering a substrate that the human eye cannot discern from any other industry-standard thermoplastic-based nonwoven.
Beall will display these fibers in nonwoven roll form at various blends with thermoplastics. In addition to new colors of fiber, the company will display a vast array of concept nonwoven materials, many of which are commercially available via major nonwoven manufacturers. These materials will include web bonding technologies consisting of calender-bond, through-air-bonding, resin-bonding, spunlace and needlepunch.
Some of Beall’s sample cotton-containing thermal bonded hygiene components achieve weights as low as 12 gsm. The fiber’s incredible softness can vastly change the handle of these substrates—even at a 15% cotton blend.
www.tjbeall.com
Booth 1825
TJ Beall Company will exhibit several new exciting advancements for its TrueCotton brand of fibers for nonwovens. First, for those FMCG customers concerned with the “natural” color of un-bleached cotton fibers, Beall will display its new line of whiter cotton fibers for the industry. These fibers are many shades whiter than the traditional line of TrueCotton and can be blended with white thermoplastics, rendering a substrate that the human eye cannot discern from any other industry-standard thermoplastic-based nonwoven.
Beall will display these fibers in nonwoven roll form at various blends with thermoplastics. In addition to new colors of fiber, the company will display a vast array of concept nonwoven materials, many of which are commercially available via major nonwoven manufacturers. These materials will include web bonding technologies consisting of calender-bond, through-air-bonding, resin-bonding, spunlace and needlepunch.
Some of Beall’s sample cotton-containing thermal bonded hygiene components achieve weights as low as 12 gsm. The fiber’s incredible softness can vastly change the handle of these substrates—even at a 15% cotton blend.
www.tjbeall.com