Wool: a precious resource to not waste

On the 26th of April a wool washing event, organised by Marcell Csillag, took place in the Aurora climate garden; let’s go through it together.

Marcell is a textile designer by training, currently doing his master’s in Regenerative Design. The complex issue of local wool processing has been catching his interest and curiosity and so, over the past year, he has decided to learn more about the topic and, consequently, to do something about it.

Why we talk about “issue”

Nowadays, many small wool processors in Europe are brought to a harsh reality difficult to avoid. The industry has been going through a decline during the past decades due to many causes (to mention a few, the lack of raw material and a broken economic system). This has been leading to the unlucky consequence of most of the small wool producers having to stop their production.

In organizing his event, Marcell has been specifically inspired by Tibor Fuller’s small industry in Pécsvárad, after hearing about the current situation that he, as many in his area of work, is facing: because of the previously mentioned crisis, he had to stop his production completely 3-4 years ago, since without any adequate market he is struggling to find someone to take over his machines and continue operating them.
That’s where Marcell’s idea stepped in, when he realized that some together could have done something to stop this from happening, with a little collaboration and good attitude.

The event

It’s here that we arrive at the wool washing event that has taken place in the Aurora climate garden on the 26th of April (which, against the weather previsions, happened to be an unexpectedly sunny, warm Saturday).
After hearing about it from Marcell’s Facebook post, many people came to participate even from the countryside, many whole families included. Each person full of enthusiasm and happy to be a part of it, which can be seen as a clear indicator of the strong desire to support the small realities, of the sense of community, that despite these apparently cold and individualistic modern times we are living through, seems to still be inside many of us.

Step by step

At 9 am, a little crowd was already reunited and ready to start, the required setup all in place: huge bags full of untreated wool, some bathtubs, huge pots, a big table. As the workshop began, while Marcell started to explain and guide the people present through each required step of the process, the troupe from a news channel was recording everything with their huge cameras; a joy for the outside eye, to see such collaboration and attention focused towards a little and at the same time infinitely big goal.

The process started at 9 am and continued until 5 pm in the afternoon, to allow each part of it to happen following the right timing. The wool — approximately 50 kilograms — had to be washed with hot water once, and then again with the detergent (an alkaline solution) twice, then rinsed with just water another 2 times. Afterwards, it was all passed through some high-speed spin-drying machines, and then at the end, finally laid on some pallets under the sun, white, soft and clean, to make sure it dried completely.

Final conclusions

So much can still be done and saved if we look at the good but not only; if we are enough honest with ourselves and the world around us to look at the bad too, knowledging what must and could be changed for the better, deciding to then do something about it ourselves, how we can, with what we currently have.

Positive change is rarely perfect or linear, and still it surely is always worth it, despite any of it.

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