Canadian Manufacturing

Daizee expands manufacturing capacity for its Delica Wash brand

by CM Staff   

Exporting & Importing Manufacturing Operations Sales & Marketing Technology / IIoT Textiles Manufacturing marketing operations regulatoin sales


Delica Wash is a laundry care system for both washing machines and driers that stops the untimely destruction of 'hand wash only' items.

TORONTO — Daizee Wellness Corp. announced on Oct. 11 that it had expanded manufacturing capacity for its Delica Wash brand, for which it holds patents in both Canada and the United States, for use in home washing machines and driers for delicate clothing items. Delica Wash is trying to improve cleaning and washing through a reduction of skin irritation and minimization of the environmental impact associated with day-to-day household laundry.

Delica Wash is a U.S. and Canadian patented rigid mesh laundry solution to allow for hand wash only delicates, athleisure, and baby clothing items. While proprietary in its design, Delica Wash is a laundry care system for both washing machines and driers that stops the untimely destruction of ‘hand wash only’ items such as lingerie and athleisure apparel from tearing, snags, and the improper rinsing of harmful detergent residue.

Daizee is expanding its current manufacturing relationship with Cross Industries Ltd. for the increased manufacturing capacity of Delica Wash. The global Laundry Care market size is projected to reach $86 billion U.S. dollars by 2026, from $66 billion U.S. dollars in 2020, at a CAGR of 4.5% during 2020-2026, according to 360 Research Reports.

Daizee CEO, Matthew Keddy, said, “Currently, consumers face two existing choices for their prized and often expensive delicates, risk mangling them in the general tumble or spin cycle or have them ball up in an old white mesh bag that neither properly cleans or rinses dirty and strong detergent residues properly. Delica Wash therefore solves three high priority problems for our customers – they save money, prevent skin rashes for themselves and their families, and reducing landfill and microplastics pollution in our lakes and oceans.”

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Microplastics or microfibers, are very tiny polyester and acrylic threads in textiles of our everyday clothing items. A recent study highlighted in New York Times noted that “scientists estimate that textiles produce 35% of the microplastic pollution in the world’s oceans (in the form of synthetic microfibers), which would make textiles the largest known source of marine microplastic pollution.”

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