Shortly after getting married five years ago, University of Virginia alumna Megan Eddings realized she couldn’t stand the smell of her husband one second longer.
Well, the odor coming from the workout shirts he was wearing, that is.
Eddings’ husband, Kyle, liked to wear the performance T-shirts made of material like Nike’s “Dri-FIT.” Made of polyester, it has a moisture-wicking quality that keeps the material from clinging to skin.
But there’s just one problem with these types of shirts, according to Eddings.
“Even though the fabric is breathable and light, it holds onto ‘the stank’ something fierce,” she said, smiling.
So much so that whenever it was Eddings’ turn to do laundry, she had to do separate loads – one with her stuff and one with Kyle’s.
Using a lavender-scented detergent, a “scent booster” and then air drying, Eddings found she could get Kyle’s shirts to be something resembling fresh. However, that would change the second he started sweating in the shirts again. The shirts would “activate,” and the musty-mildewy stench she thought she had gotten rid of would come back just as strong, sometimes stronger.
Kyle, though, was in denial. “I didn’t think my shirts really smelled,” he said. “However, after shirts started disappearing, I knew something was up. I started smelling my shirts before and after and quickly realized that maybe I just wasn’t paying the best attention.”
It was around that time when Megan Eddings, a graduate of 鶹ƽ College of Arts & Sciences – who had worked in a Brown University lab trying to find a cure for cancer, prior to embarking on a medical sales career – felt compelled to seek a solution.
“I could not believe that I was selling $3 million MRI machines and we were planning to send people to Mars, yet we did not have workout clothes that didn’t stink,” said Eddings, a Rhode Island native who has lived in Houston for the last 15 years. “With my background in chemistry, I had to understand, from a scientific perspective, why we couldn’t wash the stink out.”

