Hindustan Times (East UP)

Playing the odds

- Melissa D’Costa letters@hindustant­imes.com

A pastiche of self-drives, changing travel norms, nervous train rides and far too much room service food — see how India’s tennis pros made their way around the world in an unusually tough year

No animals were harmed in the making of this leather. Kerala’s coconuts are being used to make a textured, water-resistant pleather, used in bags, pouches, wallets and shoes. Behind the innovative material is a company called Malai — Hindi for Cream, and a term for the soft milky flesh of a fresh coconut. Malai was launched in 2018 by Zuzana Gombosova, a material researcher and fashion designer from Slovakia, and CS Susmith, a product designer from Kerala. Susmith has since moved on and Gombosova heads the company with a new business partner from Kerala named Aqeel Sait.

“I liked my job as a designer before Malai, but I was also fully aware of how much we fill our world with goods in the name of design,” Gombosova says. “I wanted to create and develop methods and materials that didn’t have such a negative impact on our environmen­t. The idea with Malai is to create a vegan alternativ­e to leather that is ecofriendl­y to make and dispose of.”

The pleather is biodegrada­ble and compostabl­e. Its primary raw material is a kind of bacterial cellulose called Nata de Coco or coconut gel in the Philippine­s, where it is used in the food industry.

Malai has tied up with farmers and processing units in Kerala to use the water from mature coconuts that they have no use for. This is fermented to create the cellulose, which is then enriched with fibres from hemp, sisal and banana stem and refined into sheets of grey material. The sheets are treated and, in some cases, dyed.

“I believe that in order to live sustainabl­y one needs to do far more than just shop sustainabl­y,” says Gombosova, who has moved to Kochi to nurture the project. “But we do live in a complex world where most of us cannot fully detach from the consumer world.”

A healthy alternativ­e, she believes, is slow living, and so Gombosova began research into sustainabl­e, plant-based materials as part of her MA studies in the field of biomateria­ls. Malai now uses its material to make bags and shoes available on its website at prices ranging from Rs 1,800 to Rs 9,500. It also supplies the material to brands such as Riti in India, the UK-based Ethical Living and Lucky Nelly in Germany.

Malai looks and feels as good as leather but it doesn’t have the cruelty that leather has,” says Arati Krishna, founder of Riti. “We have made a host of accessorie­s from it, including wallets and bags. And it makes me happy that it is made in India.”

The Malai team is currently 10 people, including labour, sales staff, interns and external consultant­s, but their work is being noticed. In February, the brand won the Circular Design sustainabi­lity in fashion challenge during Lakme Fashion Week.

“The world has not got very far with R&D on biodegrada­ble materials for, say, airplanes,” Gombosova says, “but we can certainly use eco-friendly materials in the fashion, furniture and footwear industries.”

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 ??  ?? A pleather product by Malai. “It’s biodegrada­ble and compostabl­e,” says co-founder Zuzana Gombosova (below).
A pleather product by Malai. “It’s biodegrada­ble and compostabl­e,” says co-founder Zuzana Gombosova (below).
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