Posted by
spiralwindintrees on
URL: https://www.es-forum.com/Silver-lined-clothes-tp1546740p1546781.html
Thanks for the website. I already ordered something form lessemf but
I do see the Tulle fabric and yes it is cheaper. This site doesn't
have any ratings on the fabric while lessemf does, but I did bookmark
it. Also they carry a hood which lessemf doesn't so I may want that
later. I am encouraged now regarding clothes. Did you wear them next
to your skin or on top of something? Also encouraging about the cap,
as I just ordered the silver lined cap from lessemf. I can't wait to
live somewhere far away form cell towers and Wi-fi. Finacially though
I can't pick and choose so may have to get lucky. Meanwhile I want to
do whatever I can.
Kathy
--- In
[hidden email], "emraware" <emraware@...> wrote:
>
> Regarding silver lined clothes, I've been wearing it for a long
time,
> I think possibly more than 2 years straight, almost 24/7, and it has
> helped me a lot with my sensitivity, so I would highly recommend
it.
> The following is my experience with it. Around the time I first
> tried experimenting with shielding cloths was when I was working
near
> a base station and possibly WiFi as well. Every now and then, I
felt
> as if my heart was being interrupted and I also got these recurring
> light headaches, that didn't really hurt, but they were strange. I
> hadn't had a headache before that for years, as far as I could
> remember. After realizing the radiation around me, I tried buying
> some shielding cloths from Less EMF. I found that when I wore those
> shielding cloths (completely surrounding myself), that my heart
> stopped feeling interrupted, and when I wore a hat with silver cloth
> underneath it to line it, those headaches stopped. However, when I
> took it off they would come back. My legs would also frequently
feel
> as if muscles were jumping, but after wearing pants with strong
enough
> shielding, I don't believe that's happened again for at least a
year.
> There was a time when my arms and legs felt strangely sore, and
after
> wearing the cloth, it went away within one day. My family at that
> time thought it was psychological, but by now I think I've observed
my
> symptoms long enough (several years) to know that many of them are
> not. In any case, I finally moved out of those high rf zones,
because
> I couldn't shield myself completely without people thinking I was
> nuts. When spending a lot of time in rf areas, I think I was more
> hypersensitive overall even to low exposures. Ever since moving
away
> from those areas, I think I've become less sensitive overall.
While I
> do recommend cloths when you can't avoid high rf, I still think
> avoidance is the best.
>
> The cloth from Less EMF is really expensive, though, which made me
> reluctant to buy large quantities. This drove me to search for
other
> companies, and eventually, I found this company at
shieldextrading.net
> with an online store
>
http://store.fine-silver-productsnet.com/index.html. I believe
their
> Tulle is the same high performance silver shielding fabric that Less
> EMF sells, but ShieldexTrading sells it at a more affordable
price. I
> used it for a vest. As for the pants, since I don't know how to sew
> it, I got two of their Silvertex 18% Anti-EMI pants when it was on
> sale. It was expensive, but having worn it day in and day out for
> over a year, I think it was well worth the price. I think I will
add
> their website to the links.
>
>
> --- In
[hidden email], "spiralwindintrees" <aquilawolf@>
wrote:
> >
> > I was wondering about that. EMF does affect my heart. I take
> > coenzme Q10 and that helps but my heart is a weaker area so that
and
> > my head are the first things I think of covering. I also have
thyroid
> > issues so will remember that. I will need to get a hood or
something
> > so my neck gets covered. (If I do try clothes)
> > Which clothes loose their conductivity so fast?!? I have my eye
on
> > the Silvertek long john style shirt and pants. The rating for
that is
> > excellant, up to 18GHZ I believe. Do you know if that wears well?
I
> > would just be sitting around or running errands in town and
likely I
> > would need to wait for cooler weather to wear it. If I didn't
wash
> > the clothes much wouldn't they hold up longer? My understanding
is
> > that silver is anti-bacterial so the clothes wouldn't need the
same
> > washing as regular. I'm unable to exert myself much so don't do a
> > whole lot of sweating (unless it is just plain too hot).
> >
> > Kathy
> >
> >
> > --- In
[hidden email], "Bill Bruno" <wbruno@> wrote:
> > >
> > > A silver garment can protect the parts it covers from
microwaves.
> > > But if it's a shirt that stops at the neck, then the field will
be
> > > concentrated at the neck or any other opening. So it only
> > > makes sense if you are having symptoms in your chest for
instance,
> > > or if you cover your head too.
> > >
> > > Some of the garments lose their conductivity after a couple
months
> > > of heavy use.
> > >
> > > Bill
> > >
> > > On Mon, Jul 7, 2008 at 10:08 PM, spiralwindintrees <aquilawolf@>
> > > wrote:
> > >
> > > > As anyone had experience with silver lined clothes? There
is a
> > cell
> > > > tower about 500 feet from where I live and I am disabled and
spend
> > > > most of my time here? (long story but the tower may play a
big
> > part in
> > > > my diability!). I rent and have limited funds so paint is not
an
> > > > option (hope to move at the end of the lease as well). The
> > clothes are
> > > > appealing too as I could wear them when I go out as well. Do
> > clothes
> > > > need to be grounded? I don't trust the wiring in this apt so
> > couldn't
> > > > use the ground in the outlet.
> > > >
> > > >
> > > >
> > >
> > >
> > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
> > >
> >
>