Steel shirts take the stink out of workers!
February 13th, 2010 - 4:19 pm ICT by ANIMelbourne, Feb 13 (ANI): Body odour may soon be a thing of the past, thanks to workwear label King Gee’s latest release, Steel shirts.
With development in clothing technology happening everyday, odour-destroying fabrics, performance-increasing sportswear and electrically-conductive fibres are flooding the fashion industry.
And now, King Gee has come up with Steel shirts, which are treated with a substance manufactured by textile engineering company Nano-Tex. The treatment picks up on chemicals unique to body odour and neutralises the smell, releasing it in the wash, reports The Courier Mail.
“It’s quite an impressive bit of technology,” says spokeswoman Mirjana Dujkovic. “It has the ability to recognise body odour smell and it’s an intellectual molecule. It won’t pick up perfume or smoke or anything else.” (ANI)
- 'Smart clothing' that combats body odour! - Jan 31, 2010
- Now, odour-trapping undies to stop flatulence in its tracks! - Nov 26, 2010
- Coming soon: Futuristic clothing that charges iPods, phones - Jan 21, 2010
- Body odour influences perfume choice - Oct 10, 2011
- Justin Timberlake gets turned on by natural body odour of women - Aug 09, 2010
- Embarrassed by body odour? Here are some tips to get rid of it - May 07, 2011
- Men find women's scent bigger turn-on than perfumes - Jan 14, 2010
- Snot affects out sense of smell: Study - Dec 02, 2010
- India asks Kenya to cut duties on textile imports - Mar 20, 2012
- TV images to come alive with evocative aromas - Oct 21, 2010
- Men can 'sniff out' ovulating women - Jan 23, 2010
- Scent of a fertile woman sends men's testosterone soaring - Jan 14, 2010
- Man's scent can reveal if he has STD - Dec 11, 2011
- Seven family members commit suicide in Mexico - Jan 13, 2012
- Anxiety helps people sniff out danger - Mar 23, 2012
Tags: body odour, chemicals, clothing technology, courier mail, engineering company, fabrics, fashion industry, king gee, melbourne, molecule, perfume, spokeswoman, sportswear, stink, textile engineering