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2.01 vocab
Question | Answer |
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Fiber: | : a fine hair-like structure that can be spun into yarn and made into textile products. |
Staple: | short lengths of fibers ….1 ½ to 8 inches long. |
Filaments: | longer continuous lengths, measured in yards or meters. |
Textile: | any cloth or goods produced by weaving, knitting, or felting. Comes from the Latin word texere, which means to weave. |
Fabric: | cloth or other material produced by weaving or knitting fibers. |
Apparel: | Clothing, dress, garments or attire that people wear |
Natural Fiber: | any hairlike raw material directly obtained from an animal, vegetable, or mineral source and convertible, after spinning into yarns can be made into woven cloth. |
Cellulosic: | made from cellulose - the fibrous substance in plant life - cotton, flax (linen) & hemp |
Protein: | come from animal sources - wool (sheep), silk (worms), angora, cashmere & mohair |
Manufactured Fiber: | man made by combining molecules of nitrogen, oxygen, hydrogen and carbon into staple or filament fibers - rayon, acetate, nylon, olefin, polyester, spandex, lyocell |
Abrasion Resistance: | a worn spot that can develop when fibers rub against something. |
Pilling: | tiny balls of fiber on the fabric. |
Absorbency: | ability to take in moisture. |
Durability: | refers to how long you will be able to wear or use a particular garment or item. |
Hand: | the way a fiber, yarn, or fabric feels when handled. |
Elasticity: | the ability to increase in length when under tension (elongation) and then return to the original length when released (recovery) |
Resiliency: | able to spring or bounce back into shape after crushing or wrinkling. |
Strength: | ability to withstand tension or pulling. |
Warmth: | ability of a fiber to maintain body heat of wearer. |
Wicking: | ability to draw moisture away from the body so the moisture can evaporate. |
Weave: | the process of interlacing one or more sets of yarns at right angles on a loom. |
Warp Yarns: | yarns that run lengthwise (up & down) in woven fabric. |
Weft Yarns: | yarns that run crosswise in woven fabric (right to left - sound like "weft") |
Woven Fabric: | fabric formed by weaving |
Plain Weave: | The simplest weave in which the weft (crosswise) yarn is passed over then under each warp (lengthwise) yarn |
Twill Weave: | very strong weave in which the weft yarn is passed over and under one, two or three warp yarns. This weave produces a diagonal design on the surface - denim. |
Satin Weave: | a weak weave that produces a smooth, shiny-surfaced fabric. |
Grain: | the direction of the lengthwise and crosswise yarns in a woven fabric |
Bias: | the diagonal grain of a fabric. The bias provides the greatest stretch in a woven fabric. |
Pile: | the raised surface or nap of a fabric, which is made of upright loops or strands of yarn. |
Knit: | the process of pulling loops of yarns through other loops to create interlocking rows of stitches. |
Wales: | yarns that run in the lengthwise direction, like a warp yarn in woven fabrics |
Courses: | yarns that run in the crosswise direction, like the weft yarns in woven fabrics |
Weft Knit: | a knit made with only one yarn |
Warp Knit: | a knit made with several yarns on flat knitting machines. Multiple yarns are looped together to produce a run-resistant knitted fabric. |
Seamless Knitting: | : involves the production of a whole garment in one piece on a knitting machine so little to no sewing is required. |
Nonwoven Fabrics | fabrics made from fibers not yarns. The fibers are held together by a combination of moisture, heat, chemicals and/or pressure. |