NEWS FLASH: Crowdfunding for Wool Mini Mill – WoolStore and Fibreshed Ireland- LAUNCHES TODAY

PRESS RELEASE: Galway-based Katarina Hruskova is determined to give more value to Irish farmers by processing their sheep’s wool. After opening Woolstore, a wool-washing and processing business, in 2024, Katarina is now looking to increase her mill’s capacity and start spinning wool into yarn.

With shearing season fast approaching, it’s common to hear sheep farmers all around the island commenting on how this is a loss-making exercise because the wool they produce is deemed worthless. As sheds around the country are bursting with tonne bags full of rotting wool, a recently released report has highlighted the lack of washing and small-scale processing facilities as the main bottleneck preventing the development of innovative uses for the national clip. Meanwhile, Woolstore’s small but efficient operation has proven successful in washing, picking, and carding wool for local farmers and textile crafters. Indeed, 200kg of Galway wool processed by WoolstoreIE made it all the way to Texas last year, where it was spun by a local mill and is being sold as a specialty yarn. An installation made from Irish-grown wool processed by Woolstore can currently be seen at the Irish Museum of Modern Art, as part of Cecilia Vicuña’s exhibition Reverse Migration.

As the only mill in Ireland that accepts flexible batches of wool to be washed and carded, Katarina Hruskova’s business provides direct access to an opportunity that farmers and independent designers would not be able to access otherwise. She remarks, “One of the biggest drivers for me is showing people how good Irish wool is. I love seeing the look on farmers’ faces when they get their wool back after being processed, seeing the difference, and starting to understand the quality of what they actually have!”

It is this passion for demonstrating the potential of Irish wool that has led Katarina to pursue the next milestone in her business: increasing scouring capacity and acquiring Woolstore’s own semi-worsted spinning machine. The ambition is enthusiastically welcomed by farmers and textile practitioners who have been calling for viable avenues to utilise this renewable and highly versatile material.

Malú Colorín, co-founder of social enterprise Fibreshed Ireland sums up the excitement: “This mill is part of the solution to stop relying on imported wool, reduce Ireland’s textile carbon miles, and add value to our homegrown biofibre.”

To achieve this ambitious goal that will benefit both the farming and the textile sectors, Katarina Hruskova has launched a crowdfunder campaign to raise half of the funds needed to purchase the washing and spinning machines. The rest of the funds will be sought through LEADER funding. Backers of the campaign can expect perks such as farm tours, processed fibre, discounts on services, and classes on wool processing and natural dyeing.

The crowdfunder runs until 12 April.

Katarina is optimistic, but not naive. While she knows that her small mill will not be the ultimate solution to Ireland’s wool problem, she is keen to prove that a business like this can be viable enough to be replicated in different regions of the island. If her crowdfunding campaign is successful, we will soon find out.

There’s a video about the crowdfunder on YouTube – https://youtu.be/dH6X_V34w1U?si=2ghnUt4FIndPGZdm

To learn more about the campaign and contribute, visit: https://www.idonate.ie/crowdfunder/woolstore

Note: Katarina is a member of Feltmakers Ireland

Her website – https://www.woolstore.ie/

@woolstoreireland @fibreshed_ireland

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News: Fibre to Fabric Crowdfunding Campaign

Not wool, but very interesting as raw wool fleece faces similar processing challenges within Ireland.

Not so long ago, all the processes that make-up linen production – from soil to finished textile– were still alive in Ireland, especially in the northern regions. Sadly, today Irish linen is only woven and/or finished in Ireland; everything else happens abroad. Fortunately, there are still weavers and finishers whose craft has survived, and their skills are a living heritage.

A few years ago, Helen Keys and Charlie Mallon from Mallon Linen started growing flax. Today, not only are they still growing it, but they’ve managed to acquire the machinery and knowledge to process the flax fibres up to the hackling stage.

The missing link is spinning. If only we had flax spinning machinery in Ireland, we could revive our local linen production all across the value chain!

Enter Mourne Textiles, a third-generation weaving company that has a mission to restore vintage flax processing and spinning equipment to create a sustainable circular supply chain from hemp to linen for all of Ireland.

They discovered a complete set of industrial flax-spinning machines. Although old, these machines are still very relevant for processing flax and hemp fibres after they have been harvested, scutched, and heckled.

In collaboration with local farmers at Mallon Linen, and researchers at Ulster University, Mourne Textiles aims to promote sustainable fabric production here on the Island of Ireland by creating a field-to-fabric circular supply chain. Their focus is on producing environmentally friendly fabrics grown and processed locally.

The Mourne Textiles fundraiser runs through the 30th of June. To learn more and give your support, visit here – https://www.crowdfunder.co.uk/p/fibre-to-fabric

Image via Qest website.