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No Color Organic Cotton Maggie's Functional Organic Cotton Baby Bodysuit & Cap Sets-Organiceras (Dinosaur)

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Maggie's Functional Organic Cotton Baby Bodysuit & Cap Sets-Organiceras (Dinosaur)

SKU # Maggie006
Color: No Color
Material: Organic Cotton
Price: $26.95

Choose type and quantity
 Natural & Terracotta(0-6 Mo.) $26.95
 Natural & Terracotta(6-12 Mo.) $26.95

Maggie's Functional Organic Cotton Baby Bodysuit & Cap Sets-Organiceras (Dinosaur)
Organic Cotton Baby Clothes
Maggie's Functional Organic Cotton Clothing

Made with 100% Certified Organic Cotton Interlock!
The adornments of these sensationally soft bodysuit and cap sets are made of cutting scraps from the production of our Camisoles and Criss-Cross Tops (a perfect nursing top!) and help to save useable fabric from our landfills. The design of these adorable sets is another collaboration between Maggie's and the Fair Trade Zone, a worker-owned cooperative in Nicaragua. The sewing of these garments is completed either at the Fair Trade Zone or a sweat-free manufacturer in the U.S.A.


How Maggie's Functional Organic Clothes Are Made
There is a seven-step process to turn bales of cotton into T-shirts or socks. After the cotton is grown and it is certified as 100% organic it follows this pattern:

  1. It is harvested by organic farmers
  2. Then it is "ginned," which cleans it
  3. The cotton is then spun, which turns it into yarn
  4. The yarn is then "knitted," which turns it into fabric
  5. At this point it goes through a finishing process which turns it into smooth fabric
  6. Garment dying takes place if needed
  7. Finally it is cut and sewn

This entire process takes approximately 8-9 weeks. Each step is done in a separate facility which makes our shipping costs add up quickly. For example, our T-Shirts are cut and sewn in Nicaragua by a worker-owned cooperative. We choose to support this venture as it provides sustainable wages to their members, and enables our sewers to create their own future. The shipping costs along with customs procedures are above average and sometimes can create hurdles that we don’t anticipate.

At each step we make sure not to add petroleum scours, silicon waxes, formaldehyde, anti-wrinkling agents, chlorine bleaches, or other unauthentic materials. Through all of this, we think it is worth it as we are providing an alternative to conventional cotton T-Shirts. Since the average person spends most of their life either sleeping on sheets, or wearing clothing, we are committed to manufacturing products with organic fibers that do not include pesticides or chemicals.

We’ve also managed to find and keep some pretty amazing partners in the effort… from the farmers that grow our cotton while treating the soil with dignity and respect, to the folks who sew and print our tees, to the customers who always manage to grab our socks first out of the sock drawer.

Below you will find some enlightening information about Conventional Cotton growing practices prevalent in the US. This information is largely responsible for getting us into the Organic Cotton business. Once one realizes the enormity of the pesticides and chemicals used each year to grow and process cotton, it is easy to see why we are so passionate about what we do.

  • Cotton is the second most pesticide-la
  • The world’s Cotton crop represents approximately 3% of all cultivated land. This same crop utilizes 25% of the world's annual pesticide production, and 10% of the annual herbicide production.

  • Five of the top nine pesticides used on cotton in the U.S. (cyanide, dicofol, naled, propargite, and trifluralin) are KNOWN cancer-causing chemicals. All nine are classified by the U.S. EPA as Category I and II— the most dangerous chemicals.

  • It is estimated that it takes approximately 1/3 pound of chemicals to grow enough cotton to make just one T-shirt.

  • In the U.S. today, it takes approximately 8-10 years, and $100 million to develop a new pesticide for use on cotton. It takes approximately 5-6 years for weevils and other pests to develop an immunity to that same new pesticide.

  • Cottonseed, the by-product of ginning cotton fiber, accounts for 60% of the yield from each harvest. The cottonseed is where the most concentrated amounts of pesticide residues remain. Some of this cottonseed is made into oil; the oil you read on the ingredient labels of cookies, cakes, and snacks. Some of this cottonseed is sent to our dairies and cattle ranches. This chemical cottonseed ‘enriches’ the butterfat in dairy, and marbles the beef that we eat.

  • In California, it has become illegal to feed the leaves, stems, and short fibers of cotton known as ‘gin trash’ to livestock, because of the concentrated levels of pesticide residue. Instead, this gin trash is used to make furniture, mattresses, swabs, cottonballs and tampons. The average American woman will use 11,000 tampons during her lifetime.

  • During a tour of California’s San Joaquin valley, where over 18 million pounds of pesticides are sprayed annually onto one million acres of cotton, a group stopped at two enormous toxic settlement ponds, where contaminated water from the fields is drained and left to seep into the soil. This water contains huge concentrations of salt, selenium, boron and pesticide runoff, which has caused serious damage to soil and groundwater. "(This land) It will never be usable again" says Will Allen, of the Sustainable Cotton Project. "And I don’t mean in our lifetimes; I mean forever."

  • In California’s San Joaquin Valley, estimates are that less than 25% of a pesticide sprayed from a crop duster ever hits the crop. The remainder can drift for several miles, coming to rest on fruit and vegetable crops, and farm- workers. One year more than one hundred workers fell ill after a single incident of such drift onto an adjacent vineyard.

  • One of the commonly used pesticides on cotton throughout the world, endosulfan, leached from cottonfields into a creek in Lawrence County, Alabama during heavy rains in 1995. Within days 245,000 fish were killed over 16 mile stretch. 142,000 pounds of endosulfan were used in California in 1994.

  • The problems with clothing production don’t stop in the field. During the conversion of conventional cotton into clothing, numerous toxic chemicals are added at each stage— silicone waxes, harsh petroleum scours, softeners, heavy metals, flame and soil retardants, ammonia, and formaldehyde— to name just a few.


 


 
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