banner
News center
Precise and refined in their artistry.

Fibematics is ahead of the curve on nonwovens

Aug 29, 2023

A s a niche market in the textile recycling industry, nonwovens quietly continue to keep hundreds of millions of pounds of materials out of landfills. One company has grown over the past five decades to become one of the largest in the industry in purchasing nonwoven "seconds" from major U.S. mills. Established in 1968, Fibematics Inc. began manufacturing Scrim Reinforced Material (SRM) and converting nonwoven wiping products in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and has since expanded its business to include wiping product conversion in southern California. The company is celebrating its fifty-year anniversary in 2018.

Fibematics' principal location in Philadelphia operates in a Historically Underutilized Business Zone (HUBZone) and is a Small Business Administration (SBA) HUBZone employer. Currently employing 70 workers, the company has experienced steady growth in revenue in recent years, including its California location, which has been successful since the factory opened in 2014."We repurpose an average of five million pounds of nonwovens per month," says David Bloovman, vice president of Fibematics. "Our work centres around manufacturing SRM, converting nonwoven wiping materials and trading specialized industry products."

SRM is a material composed of high-wet-strength tissue laminated to polyester scrim threads, and is typically run to tight specifications for medical applications. For industrial applications, this material often begins as parent rolls of towel and tissue rejected by mills for their primary applications, and as industrial SRM. It is utilized in industries such as janitorial and sanitation as an absorbent wiping material.

"Manufacturing SRM is one of the oldest practices in the nonwoven industry," says Bloovman. "This material remains in high demand due to its strong durability, and it continues to be an economical choice for wipers [manufactured products used to clean surfaces]."

In the higher-end market, Fibematics ships virgin SRM to converters in China, where it is transformed into items such as surgeon's hand towels and disposable caps, procedural tray towels and smaller towels for medical kits. These products are then shipped back to hospitals in North America.

On the lower-end, Fibematics purchases "seconds" from mills, producing "firsts" such as napkins and paper towels. This lower grade material is reinforced with SRM, resulting in a heavier-duty product, which is cut and sold as various types of wipers.

Fibematics' Philadelphia headquarters has 14 machines used to convert both firsts and seconds into nonwoven wiping materials, giving these discarded textiles a useful second life and keeping waste out of landfills. The resulting products find end markets as base for new wiping products, including specialty wet wipes and dry towels.

"Think of Fibematics the next time you're at a barbecue restaurant and use a wet wipe to clean up that messy sauce," Bloovman jokes. "The wipe material may have come from our factory!"

Fibematics also offers private label wipes and partners with existing and startup hygiene companies, on both U.S. coasts, helping companies select the appropriate nonwoven wiper material and sizes best for their businesses, and designing custom logos and branded packaging.

Specifically, Fibematics converts and/or trades the following nonwovens: Spunlace, Airlaid, DRC, Embossed Tissue, Meltblown Polypropylene (MBPP), Spunbond Polypropylene (SBPP)/Polyester (SBPE), Polyethylene Laminates, and others, including parent rolls and a variety of converted formats. Custom converted products include slit/rewound Parent Rolls, Continuous Roll Towels, Perforated Rolls, Centre Pull Rolls, Interfold Pop Ups, 1/4 Folds, 1/6 Folds, 1/8 Folds and Flat Sheets in many sizes.

The company also offers many specialized products that are highly restricted with regard to application and geographical location, selling through strategic relationships in more than 30 countries on six continents. After purchasing secondary material from mills in the United States, Fibematics processes and sells between 10 and 15 million pounds of material overseas yearly, with all materials thoroughly vetted prior to shipment.

Staying ahead of the curveFibematics' success, according to Bloovman, is due in part to their ability to stay ahead of the curve in industry awareness and presenting creative options to customers.

For example, their trade vertical is enhanced through long-time membership with the Secondary Materials and Recycled Textiles (SMART) association, a relationship advocated by Bloovman, who recently became SMART's newest board president.

"We work with many SMART members in the wiping chapter who primarily sell rags," Bloovman explains. "These relationships help augment our customers' businesses, enabling them to compete with larger companies by creating different types of wipers.

"We're seeing more and more of a push towards biodegradability," he continues. "It is a big challenge to create a strong product that functions at the high-end level while making it biodegradable. Unfortunately, current biodegradable nonwovens simply don't perform as well. It is our industry's job to remain innovative and continually work towards the most environmentally friendly solution."

Bloovman adds that Fibematics works hard to educate customers on the importance of nonwoven wipers and notes that studies show disposable nonwoven wipers cause less harm to the environment than the laundering of textile-based towels.

From washrooms to factory floors, Fibematics' products are helping to replace traditional textile towels, rags and wipers worldwide.

So, what does the future hold for Fibematics?

"We will continue to adapt to global market conditions and create new sales channels for existing and emerging wiper technologies via our well-established global network of customers and suppliers," says Bloovman. RPN

This article was originally published in the September, 2018 edition of Recycling Product News, Volume 26, Number 7.

3313 W. Stokley St. Philadelphia, PAUS, 19140

Website: fibematicsinc.com

3465 Box Hill Corporate Center Drive, Suite H Abingdon, MDUS, 21009

Website: smartasn.org

Staying ahead of the curve