latex cores: How natural is "Natural"?
Oct 24, 2010 6:47 PM
Joined: Oct 24, 2010
Points: 2
 

 

I'm interested in the natural latex cores this company has for my own bed building project:
 
How is "Natural" defined with latex beds though?  
 
With food, a product can be labeled "USDA Organic" if it is 95% organic and can be labeled "Made with organic ingredients" if it is 70% organic, but forfeit the USDA label.  Failing that, the merchant can label any ingredients on the back as organic, but must not have "Organic" displayed on the front of the box.
 
So with mattresses, I'm guessing their is a similar loop hole with listing ingredients and proportions and I'm wondering how much synthetics can be used in a latex mattress advertised as being rubber tree derived and still be called "Natural"
 
My goal is to avoid a product claimed to be "natural" but also made with synthetics such as SBR (styrene butadiene rubber), since when you are sensitive, even a small amount is bad.  I'm not concerned about the chemicals used in the vulcanization process (sulfur, zinc oxide and what not) nor do I wring my hands as to weather the rubber tree plantation is certified organic - I'm just trying to avoid the petrol.
 
This message was modified Oct 24, 2010 by OhSoSleepy
Re: latex cores: How natural is "Natural"?
Reply #7 Oct 25, 2010 2:56 PM
Joined: Oct 24, 2010
Points: 2
 

OK, thanks for the great info!  I think I can feel safe making a purchase from a LI product at least.  Still, I'm sadly unsurprised that a product labeled "100% natural" can have a few lbs of SBR in it, depending on the manufacturer.
 
Any merchants reading this who do not use SBR in their product might want to say so.
 
Trying to avoid products containing petrol, formaldehyde or trichloroethylene is quite a archeology dig these days.  Even food has it's FD&C dyes sourced from coal tar, not to mention saccharin derived from petrol and more petrol from BHA and BHT. Then of course, rancid vegetable oil in everything and mislabeling of "trans-fat free" products which can allow trans-fats by the gram or just contain loads of mono and di-glycerides due to label-law loopholes.
 
Small wonder auto-immune diseases aren't more prevalent.

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