Sewing face masks goes viral in Europe

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PISEK, Czech Republic, March 22, 2020 (BSS/AFP) – What do prisoners, a
former first lady and textile makers have in common? All have threaded their
needles to combat a dire global shortage of face masks that risks the health
of millions amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

Just a week ago, the small Czech company Nanospace was producing bed linen
using nanomembrane — a textile with a very fine web of nanofibres — to
protect allergic sleepers from mites.

But as the deadly novel coronavirus started reaping its grim toll in
Europe, Nanospace workshops began churning out 10,000 nanomembrane face masks
per day for two hospitals in the southern Czech Republic.

The company produced the first masks within two days of a desperate call
from the local city hall on March 14.

“We charge them (the hospitals) at cost price. If the hospitals collapse
due to a shortage of masks, our region will be in big trouble,” Nanospace
sales director Jiri Kus told AFP.

The World Health Organisation recommends wearing protective masks in
public, despite some experts saying masks and gloves are ineffective in
preventing coronavirus infections.

Tens of thousands of Europeans are joining forces via social media to sew
masks as millions are confined to their homes under lockdown measures imposed
to prevent COVID-19 infections.

A Czech Facebook group called “Czechia sews face masks” went viral,
drawing over 33,000 members over the last week as Prague ordered citizens to
wear masks outdoors and closed borders to stem the spread of the virus.

Artists and celebrities including actress Dagmar Havlova, the wife of late
Czech president Vaclav Havel, have also pitched-in to make masks.

In neighbouring Poland, Chechen women who arrived as refugees have teamed
up with women’s groups to sew masks for hospitals.

– ’24/7′ –

Mask-making has also taken off in Italy, the worst-hit country in the
world.

Deaths surged past 4,800 as of Saturday, with more than 53,000 confirmed
infections.

Italian clothes and textiles-maker Miroglio has swapped sewing women’s
fashion for cotton face masks, rapidly ramping up production to 75,000 units
per day with a view to hitting 100,000 soon, the La Stampa daily reported.

Businesses in hard-hit Spain are also making the switch.

Bag maker Disenos NT told AFP it was producing 70-80,000 face masks per
day in its Andalusian factory, working “at 100 percent capacity, 24 hours,
seven days a week.”

The Galicia-based Inditex, the world’s largest fashion group that owns
Zara among other popular brands, is also looking to begin making face masks
at some plants, joining smaller Spanish textile companies already at work.

Spain has recorded Europe’s second-highest COVID-19 death toll, hitting
1,326 as of Saturday, with almost 25,000 confirmed cases.

– Prisoners –

Prisoners are also pitching in. Female inmates in the small EU Baltic
state of Lithuania aim to turn out 10,000 face masks per week for use in
prisons to safeguard officers, convicts and their lawyers, Lithuanian Justice
Minister Elvinas Jankevicius told AFP.

Hungarian prisoners have made some 300,000 face masks for the country’s
health sector since February.

Dubbed “Europe’s sweatshop” because of its many low-cost fast-fashion
factories, Bulgaria has seen dozens of them switch to making masks as orders
for clothes dry up amid the Europe-wide closure of non-essential shops,
including clothing stores.

Costume-makers from the shuttered opera in the eastern Bulgarian city of
Burgas have also volunteered to make masks, while Angel Baby, a firm
producing sleeping bags for kids in the capital Sofia, is handing out masks
decorated with owl, dinosaur, llama and monkey prints to doctors and the
police.

– Stitching solidarity –

A hospital in the western German city of Essen has taken mask-making into
its own hands, with non-medical staff ranging from clerks to gardeners
working from home to sew masks for patients.

German sports clothes maker Trigema and mattress-maker Breckle are among
several companies also starting to make them.

Back in the Czech Republic, Nanospace sales director Jiri Kus is smiling
as he scrambles for supplies and financing to expand mask production to the
clack and rumble of the seven sewing machines in one of his workshops.

“I’m happy we’ve made it. At first I thought it was impossible, but when I
saw the first hundred face masks on Monday, it just felt great.”

“Now we have volunteers offering help — they are sewing masks at home and
although we can’t use them, the solidarity and the enthusiasm are simply
amazing.”