Commuting by subway or on foot in big cities during the summer months can be a sticky situation for professionals, who often find themselves perspiring in their collared dress shirts before they even arrive to work. Ministry of Supply, a startup formed by MIT graduates, has found a way to solve that problem by designing a new line of business dress shirts called Apollo that uses a combination of textiles -- including a material designed for NASA spacesuits -- to keep people cool even when it's hot outside.
Manufacturers have been making sweat-resistant athletic clothing for years using a material called wicking that helps keep sweat away from a person's body as they perspire. Using this in combination with an antimicrobial coating and phase-change material developed by NASA to control the temperature inside space suits, Ministry of Supply -- co-founded by Gihan Amarasiriwardena, Kit Hickey, Aman Adbani, and Kevin Rustagi -- has designed a shirt that customer Brian Cass called "the most amazing shirt I've ever owned."
Ministry of Supply's co-founders model the company's new line of dress shirts, which use a combination of materials -- including technology developed by NASA -- to keep sweat away from a person's body and regulate heat so they are sweat- and odor-resistant. They are also made of a stretchy fabric that conforms to a person's body, making them more comfortable than traditional dress shirts. (Source: Ministry of Supply)
The idea was born about a year and a half ago and based on the experience of a friend of the group who works in the financial industry, Amarasiriwardena, who studied chemical engineering with a focus on materials, told us. The friend complained that when he commuted on the subway in the summer, he would "sweat through his shirt" on the way to work and would feel "really uncomfortable."
"Our idea was, what if we could take materials from running clothing and bring that over to dresswear?" Amarasiriwardena said of his and product design specialist Rustagi's decision to team up to launch the company, which did a small run of 50 dress shirts based on new performance fabrics last October. The company has now sold about 250 men's dress shirts, which cost between $99 and $129 and come in the traditional collar and sleeve lengths, he said.
Amarasiriwardena said some of the design of the material of the Apollo shirt was based on his own experience interning for several summers at Sports Technology Institute in Loughborough, UK. Rather than use woven cotton, the material of which traditional dress shirts for men are made, Ministry of Supply uses a pique knit, which uses a different manufacturing process. "Woven cotton doesn't stretch," he said. "The difference [with Apollo] is the double knitting. On the surface that touches the skin there are very small pores. They pull up the moisture and it's able to evaporate easily and keeps your skin dry.
The material -- which then is coated with an anti-microbial liquid that kills the bacteria on the skin that causes perspiration odor -- is similar to wicking, which is common in athletic clothing. But Ministry of Supply does one better and also uses phase change material developed by NASA to also control the temperature of the Apollo shirt, Amarasiriwardena said. "We print on the inner surface these small microscopic beads that have this special polymer -- it melts when it gets hot," he said.
@Jack Rupert, PE--A spot on observation about the emergence of new and varied technologies from space exploration. As for me, I would definitely wear an Apollo shirt, as summer here in the South is beastly!
Another interesting non-astronaut product with it's origins in the apace industry. It's a shame that the government and people in general don't see that it isn't just about studying the surface of the moon and that there are real outgrowths from the science and the technology developed to support the science.
Kevin, I am curious about one thing: How do you guage the performance of this shirt in a measurable (quantitative) way? Is there any way to tell how well it's working?
This is a really exciting development in my book. As a runner and avid backpacker, the prospect of a shirt that keeps me cool, doesn't stink and doesn't leave me feeling sticky at the end of the day sounds too good be be true. After you've saturated the dress shirt market, be sure to turn your attention back to the sports performance arena. We'll be waiting!
Thanks Charles,
We're actually offering our Agent Shirt, which is also moisture wicking and breathable for $85.
Thanks for your interest! Definitely shoot us an email at founders@ministryofsupply.com or call us at 617.651.2340 with any other questions.
Cheers,
Kevin
How did you come by the technology? It is tech transfer from NASA? Is it the public domain? I would imagine some of your procedures are proprietary, but the basic technology must have been available to you.
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