Details, Explanation and Meaning About Textile

Textile Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description

This article is about the type of fabric. Textile is also a jargon term used by naturists or nudists to describe a person who wears clothes, and also the property that nudity is not allowed, e.g. in "textile beach", "textile campsite", etc.

A textile is any kind of woven, knitted, knotted (as in macrame) or tufted cloth, or a non-woven fabric (a cloth made of fibers that have been bonded into a fabric, e.g. felt).

Textile also refers to the yarns, threads and wools that can be spun, woven, tufted, tied and otherwise used to manufacture cloth. The production of textiles is an ancient art, whose speed and scale of production has been altered almost beyond recognition by mass-production and the introduction of modern manufacturing techniques. An ancient Roman weaver would have no problem recognizing a plain weave, twill or satin.

Many textiles have been in use for millennia, while others use artificial fibers and are recent inventions. The range of fibers has increased in the last 100 years. The first synthetics were made in the 1920s and 1930s.

Table of contents
1 Sources and types
2 Production methods
3 Processes
4 Uses
5 See also
6 External links

Sources and types

Textiles can be made from a variety of materials. The following is a partial list of the materials that can be used to make textiles.

Animal origin

Vegetable

Derived from plant products

Mineral

  • Asbestos: now has very limited uses.
  • Glass fibres can be used in the manufacture of textiles for insulation and other purposes.
  • Metal fibre, metal wire and metal foil have some uses in textiles, either on their own or with other materials (see, for example, goldwork embroidery).

Man-made

Production methods

  • Braiding/Plaiting
  • Crochet – usually by hand.
  • Embroidery – threads which are added to the surface of a finished textile.
  • Felt – fibres are matted together to produce a cloth.
  • Knitting – by hand or on knitting machines.
  • Knotting, including macrame: used in making nets.
  • Lace – again both hand made and machine made.
  • Pile fabrics – carpets and some rugs
  • Velvet, velveteen, plush fabrics and similar have a secondary set of yarns which provide a pile.
  • Weaving – the cloth is prepared on a loom, of which there are a number of types. Some weaving is still done by hand, but the vast majority is mechanised.

Processes

Uses

Textiles have been used in almost every possible context where their properties are useful. In
cleaning

See also

External links


This is an Article on Textile. Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About Textile


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