The cool weather is coming and my mother asked me the other day if she could buy my girls some winter pajamas. This was obviously a great offer, but the pajama question is complicated, and as I started in on my spiel I could practically see the wind coming out of her sails. Okay, so maybe its not that complicated, but there are a couple of things to consider when dressing little ones for bed.
In 1971 the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) standardized childrens sleepwear specifying that garments exposed to an open flame for 3 seconds must self extinguish. You might remember a stifling pair of polyester pajamas from your youth; polyester was a popular bedtime fabric because of its inherent flame resistance -- most polyesters anyway, including modacrylic (Verel, SEF, Kanecaron); matrix (Cordelan); and vinyon (Leavil). Flame retardants are woven into the fabric during manufacture and become part of the fabrics molecular composition. The resulting polymers are very stable, so youre not compromising your childs health, just their comfort. (There is an environmental negative in that polyester is made from non-renewable petrochemicals however.)
Cotton clothes treated with chemical fire retardants were approved by the CPSC, but untreated cotton ...


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