Fibre To Fabric
Fibre To Fabric
Introduction
Have you noticed that the clothes we wear feel very different - some are soft, some are coarse and some are silky. Also, we wear different clothes in
different seasons. Clothes cover our body and protect us from weather conditions, insect bites and of course, they make us smart and presentable
too. In this chapter, let us learn about how different types ofclothes are made.
When man began to settle down in communities, he began to tie together twigs, grass, leaves, animal skin/fur etc into mats and clothes. They
simply draped these fabric around their body because they didn't know stitching.
Later, when needle was invented, people started stitching these fabric into different shapes to suit their body and thus clothes evolved.
Now, as we know the we have a variety of clothing choices for both men and women. They are very varied in choices, colours, design etc. Infact,
we have moved from simple clothing to 'fashionable' clothing.
Fibres Yarn and Fabric
A fabric is any material of cloth that we use. Eg: Cotton, Jute, Wool, Silk, Nylon, Polyster
When you untwist a yarn to loosen it, we see that it is made up of multiplethin hair-like strands called Fibres.
Therefore, we can say that fabric is made of yarn and a yarn is in turn made of fibres.
Types of Fibres
Synthetic Fibre
The fruits of the cotton plant, commonly called Cotton bolls. After maturing, these cotton bolls burst open.
Inside these, there are seeds, which are covered with cotton.
Then, by a process called Ginning of cotton, fibres are separated from the seeds.
Cotton is usually used to make sarees, shirts, pants, casual wear, bedsheets, curtains etc
Jute
Jute is obtained from the stem of jute plant.
Then, the stem of such harvest plant are immersed in water for a few days so that they rot.
These fibres are converted into yarns by spinning and then used in fabrics
Fibre to Yarn : Spinning
The process of making yarn from fibres is called Spinning.
In this process, a large number of fibres from a cotton wool are drawn out and gently twisted such that the fibres gel together to form a yarn.
Charaka is the wheel which was popularised by Mahatma Gandhi with an intent to promote inhouse hand woven Indian cloth market.
Weaving
Knitting
The process of getting a single yarn together to form a fabric is called Knitting.