How this startup went from producing a synthetic spider silk to partnering with fashion icons
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May 19, 2018, 20:41 IST
In a 2016 interview with Business Insider, Widmaier said he wasn't much of a fashion guy. But as his company's sustainable materials have increasingly been embraced by the fashion industry, that's shifted a bit. "I'm not not a fashion guy, we'll put me in the middle," he said.
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Microsilk was responsible for putting Bolt Threads on the apparel industry's radar. Scientists have been trying to nail down the production of a synthetic spider silk for 30 years, but Widmaier and his team were the ones to accomplish it, though they knew the arachnids' cannibalistic nature would get in the way if they turned to them for help. “Spiders in a cage would eat each other, so that’s a problem.”
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In lieu of enlisting the help of spiders, the company takes DNA samples that mimic spider silk proteins and transforms the DNA into yeast, which the company controls and can grow at a rapid rate. Each spot below is a single yeast cell that feasts on nutrients and doubles every four hours.
The yeast grows and churns out silk proteins during fermentation, after which point the product turns into a powder. It's pure synthetic spider silk protein now, but the process isn't over yet. It's only a polymer and the equivalent of a polyester pellet before being sent off to become a fiber.
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The powder is sent down the hall to the fiber lab where it is dissolved into a liquid consistency similar to that of molasses. It's extruded through tiny holes in this doodad...
...into long strands of silk.
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A spinline is then used to spin the product into spools. The fibers can then be woven into fabrics and used for production.
Widmaier said there was a time in the company's history when a small piece of silk fiber was finite and precious. The team would handle it with care and use it for pitches. Now, team members are tracking so much of it into the hallway that sticky mats had to be placed in the lab doorway's threshold.
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Last March, the material was ready for consumers. Bolt Threads released about 50 limited-edition $314 neckties as its first consumer product. Widmaier said feedback was positive — and it was only the beginning of the unique products that the company plans to churn out.
The product and its material didn't go unnoticed. Last year, Bolt Threads was approached by New York's Museum of Modern Art to develop a modern-day version of the 1960s shift dress manufactured from the synthetic spider silk.
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The dress was showcased in the museum's "Items: Is Fashion Modern?" exhibit from October 1, 2017, to January 28, 2018.
What became of the collaboration was a more long-term partnership between Bolt Threads and the fashion house. The same month of the MoMA exhibit opening, two of McCartney's designs composed of 100% Microsilk debuted backstage at the designer's 2017 Paris Fashion Week show.
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The brown-knitted blouse and trousers didn't make an appearance down the runway, but they did make their way into the "Fashioned From Nature" exhibit in London's Victoria and Albert Museum.
Bolt Threads announced the new Mylo material on April 16. Grown in New York by biomaterials company Ecovative, Widmaier said the process is not dissimilar to running a mushroom farm. Mycelium cells are grown in stalks of corn, feasting on nutrients before self-assembling into a dense block of material that can then be sliced to a desired width.
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And unlike animal leather, Mylo isn't dyed using smelly chemicals. Instead, English Breakfast Tea is used to give the material varying degrees of color. The dyeing process is pretty straightforward: slice open a handful of tea bags, make a brew, throw the material in and steep to your desired tint.
As far as smell goes, Widmaier said the material "smells like a funky mushroom when it comes right out of the incubator," but once it's treated it takes on a neutral scent.
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Going forward, Widmaier said he was unable to disclose particular big things that are slated for 2018, but he did say there is much in the works for Bolt Threads and its brands and partners, which include outdoor brands Patagonia and Best Made. Both sustainable materials, the Microsilk and Mylo, will also play roles in the mass market sometime this year.
One luxury brand that has never been lagging is McCartney's. Her role in sustainable fashion was why Bolt Threads was drawn to a partnership with her in the first place. Widmaier said she's been committed to sustainable products "before it was even cool, back when it was laughable." He said he hopes in hindsight, years down the line, that companies like McCartney's and Bolt Threads will be seen as making sustainability more mainstream in the fashion industry.