
6 innovative ways to green the fashion industry
Apparel manufacturing is appallingly wasteful and polluting, but these exciting new projects and technologies are putting a sustainable spin on fashion.

Apparel manufacturing is appallingly wasteful and polluting, but these exciting new projects and technologies are putting a sustainable spin on fashion.

Two Israeli companies team up to bring a new level of sustainability to the highly polluting textile industry.

Denim exec calls Sonovia’s technology ‘the Tesla of indigo dyeing’ with the potential to revolutionize the jeans industry.

Leading European textile machinery maker partners with Sonovia to cut carbon footprint of clothing production ahead of new European rules.

Sonovia and PureDenim announce a strategic collaboration to develop revolutionary process to reduce water and energy usage, improve durability.

Tests show the zinc-oxide treated fabric not only neutralizes SARS-CoV-2 and H1N1, but also bacteria that are causing ‘maskne’ during the pandemic.

Maker of antiviral, antibacterial SonoMasks now moving into automotive industry in cooperation with Adler, a major producer of car components.

A Chinese lab has proven the metal-oxide infused washable facemasks destroy more than 90% of the novel coronavirus.

From face-recognition surveillance and bacteria-proof bedding to air-filtration systems and personal robots, Israeli tech can march hospitals forward.

Sonovia’s reusable cotton-poly SonoMask are infused with metal-oxide nanoparticles that kill germs and last through 100 washings.

Now that we’re all covering our faces to avoid COVID-19, Israeli innovators are stepping up invention of antiviral masks, shields and stickers.

Two Israeli startups and an Israeli university are ramping up solutions that may offer long-term help in dealing with the coronavirus epidemic.

Two Israeli companies are rushing to complete development of facemasks that could be vital prevention tools in epidemics like Wuhan coronavirus.

Sonovia’s technique, developed at Bar-Ilan University, could also make fabrics fire resistant, water repellant and even body odor-proof.