It’s a gentle summer afternoon and beneath the dappled light of tall trees, an old blue touring caravan is parked. It’s the home of Spirit Natural clothing, the brainchild of a budding entrepreneur whose vision for a gentler, more sustainable world is underpinned by some hard-headed research into how to make it happen.
Tom Osborne from Michelago may look like a new generation hippie, but the vision for Spirit Natural hemp clothing came from his work in sales and marketing. “I knew that hemp was a more environmentally friendly fabric but I could see that it had a bit of a PR problem”, he says. “90% of textiles are made from a synthetic oil base or a cotton monoculture which has its own plethora of environmental problems, and I wasn’t seeing many contemporary brands using hemp”.
And hemp has many virtues: it grows fast and tall so that it outcompetes other plants, reducing the need for herbicides. That growth creates long fibre structures that make the fabric more durable, and the plant requires much less water than cotton. Additionally, the crop is regenerative for the soil, adding nitrogen as it grows.
The greater challenge was to develop a supply chain, and Tom says putting the pieces together to find suppliers who were working ethically and were accredited wasn’t easy. The journey took him to Hemp Fortex at Qingdao in China. Their factory runs on solar power, holds certifications for organic textile standards, and adheres to EU standards for dyeing and wastewater treatment.
“I found them through the Fair Wear Foundation, a European NGO that protects garment workers rights. That in itself took at least a year with a few false starts, but I remember cheering in my room at 5.30 on the morning when the email finally came through from Hemp Fortex saying they’d work with me”, Tom says.
Tom and his partner Sammy, who is a videographer, travelled to China to document the process. There was an investment from his mum, Gini, and production began. The first line is small, one style of unisex jeans and t-shirts. Some fabrics are plant dyed including a glowing golden turmeric dyed top.
“The market so far has been people who live in coastal environments, people who are connected with the outdoors and are sick of plastic pollution. They want natural fibres and they want quality. They choose less but they’re choosing quality”, Tom says.
“I want to embody my own philosophy which is based on diversity. If we have 90% of fabrics being the same, there’s not a lot of room for seeing what works in our journey towards more sustainable communities and society”.
The next steps are a fully plant dyed collection, made in Australia of hemp and organic cotton. Tom plans to keep it simple, but wants to bring in overshirts and shorts, staying with the workwear-inspired theme, described by Tom as “anything I can wear out in the paddocks”.
“As a fabric on your skin hemp is more breathable than cotton and antibacterial like wool. You get more wear out of it between washes. It doesn’t make much sense to wear oil-based synthetic fibre on the biggest organ of your body, your skin. Why would you actively choose to wear petrochemicals?”
Original Article published by Genevieve Jacobs on the RiotACT.