Material: More than 80% pure EVA
Suitable for: windbreakers and sets
Thickness: 15 threads
Weight: 120 grams per square meter
Width: 58 inches
Function: Environmentally friendly and fashionable
Process: High frequency welding
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We have a high-experienced technical team, And have advanced lob to give customers professional testing report. in order to keep each item highly meet customers requirestment.
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Q: 1.Ordering Information
term if you can not accept T/T or L/C.
Packing: usually for standard express delivery packing, if quantity more, packaged can be done according to your requirements.
Q: 2.Delivery Time
could be faster, please send email to negotiate.
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News:
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Whether singin' in the rain like Gene Kelly or playing guitar in a purple-tinted version of it like Prince, the best way to stay dry in a downpour is to wear a raincoat. While raincoats have evolved in the 195 years since waterproof fabric was first patented, clever chemistry has always been key to their success.
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The first raincoats came about thanks to innovations in making rubber solutions. Today, high-end rainwear relies on fluoropolymer materials and cutting-edge construction. Raincoats may have been a risky business venture in the 1800s, but in the 21st century, their sales are booming: The market for waterproof breathable textiles could reach $2.18 billion in revenue by 2022, according to a report from market research firm Global Market Insights. Health-conscious consumers are driving much of the market's growth as they run, bike, and trek in all types of weather.
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The rainy weather in his native Scotland is what likely inspired chemist Charles Macintosh, the man most commonly credited with inventing the modern raincoat. Necessity is the mother of invention, after all. In the U.K., raincoats are still called mackintoshes (with a k mysteriously added).
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Before Macintosh, inventors had been working toward waterproofing fabric with a layer of rubber by dissolving it in a solvent and spreading it on material. But these fabrics tended to be sticky. "Macintosh's brilliant idea to avoid the stickiness was simply to press two sheets of fabric together with the rubber sandwiched between them," says John Loadman, a retired analytical chemist, rubber historian, and author of "Tears of the Tree: The Story of Rubber-a Modern Marvel."
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