1990s-2000s

Research and development, and production of high quality rainwear products.

The Catalyst

An elderly relation is found suffering from hypothermia. The family never forgets it.

2013/14

A local inventor’s Far Infrared polymer changes everything - safe, efficient, and producing exactly the right kind of therapeutic heat. John starts working from the garage.

2016

Feel the Warmth is born as a Community Interest Company. The first clothing designs use a 12v system. The mission is simple: heat the person, not the room.

2017

A move to a 7.4v battery makes the Super Kidney Warmer smaller and more flexible. A heat belt replaces the bulkier waistcoat design.

2018

The Super Kidney Warmer launches.

The Heat Pad launches.

Products supplied to Police Scotland’s forensic team.

2019

The move to a 5v system is a game changer - USB power banks make the product genuinely accessible for the first time.

2020

COVID-19 halts all activity.

2022/23

Starting again - but stronger. Dr Adrian Smales joins as advisor and mentor. A new aluminised backing significantly boosts efficiency. The partnership with VASLan begins in earnest.

2024/25

Pilot study results: anxiety and stress halved, sleep quality significantly improved across 60 participants.

2026

New grant funding and research underway, and an extended workshop allows further research and development work. The next chapter of Feel the Warmth CIC begins.

I had the chance to be fitted with a Heat Belt and within minutes felt the gentle, comforting warm that the small unobtrusive battery provided. I was amazed at the radiating warmth that the belt enabled throughout my body. And with a full battery on the low setting (and that was all I needed) it will cost me 16p per day. That’s going to make a big dent in my heating bills since I’ll be turning it down a notch or two.

I have a very challenging condition called Reynauds … it means painful, very cold extremities that are prone to ulcers which can lead to amputation in severe cases. This product is a revolutionary advance for the care of people with this condition, Systemic Sclerosis (which I also have), Fibromyalgia, MS and the frail and elderly, many more; Hill Walkers, Sailors, RNLI volunteers … the list is endless.

Marie Gray
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