Healthy home insight by Relish Designs is a blog that shares collections of information to help families create healthy homes, avoid hidden and harmful chemicals, find healthier product options and live a conscious life that helps preserve the environment.
Showing posts with label brominated flame retardants. Show all posts
Showing posts with label brominated flame retardants. Show all posts
Thursday, July 8, 2010
Toxic substances cartoon lobby
A sense of humor with a serious message
A toxic chemical lobby launched in the USA is approaching the issue of chemicals in our homes and in our products with a sense of serious humor. It has been refreshing to see visual campaigns circulating about these issues, although frustrating that these issues still remain largely unseen and unspoken about within the Australian consumer marketplace.
Saturday, June 26, 2010
Enviro blog has collated a list of furniture considerations as inspired by the new Q Collection from New York that considers the health of your home and the planet.
Avoid :
- No formaldehyde
Formaldehyde is used in most furniture adhesives, but the Q Collection uses only water-based adhesives. - No polyurethane, no dacron
Polyurethane, a known carcinogen, is used as a topcoat and in the manufacturing of foam and dacron (part of foam padding) contains toluene. This company uses only water-based stains, topcoats and natural latex foam rubber. - No brominated flame retardants
Brominated flame retardants (BFRs) are banned in Europe but are still being used extensively in US upholstery manufacturing. - No heavy metals
Leather tanning is the most harmful of all fabric production processes because it relies on harmful heavy metals like chromium 6. - No toxic stain resistant chemicals
Fabrics often contain dioxin (typically as a byproduct of the dyeing and finishing processes), a powerful carcinogen that is also known to damage the human immune system. Dioxins are also on the "dirty dozen" list of persistent environmental pollutants (POPs). - Sustainably harvested wood, 100% certified
The source of most wood used to make furniture today is unknown. Unfortunately, it can come from some of the world's most threatened ecosystems, such as old-growth forests in the Pacific Northwest or the Amazon rain forest. The U.S. is by far the largest importer of virgin timber from the Amazon. - Organic or European ecological cotton
Cotton is the world's most polluting crop because of enormous levels of pesticides and herbicides used in growing it. - Non-toxic, low-impact fabric dyes
Fabric dyes often contain toxic chemicals that are suspected to cause cancer, reproductive or developmental damage.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)