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CRIMP FABRICS

  • 1 Crimp Fabrics

    The term includes such types as the "blister" and the "crepon." These fabrics are used for the making of dress goods, and can be produced in five different ways, namely: (a) by making suitable combinations of slack and tight weaves; (b) unequal warp tension in weaving, the crimp forming warp threads being allowed to weave very slack; (c) by combining two materials having a marked dissimilarity of shrinkage power during wet finishing, i.e., botany wool and mohair; (d) by modifying the weave structure in such a manner as to drop some picks from the main fabric and allow them to float on the back, the effectiveness of this method is enhanced by using a hard-twisted, single weft yarn to assist the contraction; (e) chemical means, such as is produced by printing the cloth in stripes with caustic soda of about 20 per cent strength, thickened with some substance such as starch. The cloth shrinks where printed and the unprinted parts in puckering gives the crimp effect. By dyeing the cloth two tones are obtained as a darker shade is shown where the caustic soda appears (see crepeing and crimps)

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Crimp Fabrics

  • 2 Crinkle Fabrics

    A general term for most cotton or cotton and silk plain weave cloths which have crepe or crimp stripes in the warp.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Crinkle Fabrics

  • 3 гофрирана тъкан

    crimp fabric
    crimp fabrics

    Български-Angleščina политехнически речник > гофрирана тъкан

  • 4 клоке

    crimp fabric
    crimp fabrics

    Български-Angleščina политехнически речник > клоке

  • 5 Crinkle

    CRINKLE, or SEERSUCKER
    Originally a silk fabric with flat and puckered stripes alternating across the fabric. Now applied to cotton dress fabrics of the better quality crimp styles, woven 32-in. wide in many weights. Two beams are required, one for the crimp stripes and one for the ordinary. One cloth has 72 ends and 72 picks per inch, 2/60's and 30's warps, 32's weft, super Egyptian yarns (see Seersucker) ———————— A crinkly or crimp effect obtained on various fibres by chemical treatment. Caustic soda produces a crinkle on wool Various acids give this effect to silk, cotton, etc.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Crinkle

  • 6 Seersucker

    CRINKLE, or SEERSUCKER
    Originally a silk fabric with flat and puckered stripes alternating across the fabric. Now applied to cotton dress fabrics of the better quality crimp styles, woven 32-in. wide in many weights. Two beams are required, one for the crimp stripes and one for the ordinary. One cloth has 72 ends and 72 picks per inch, 2/60's and 30's warps, 32's weft, super Egyptian yarns (see Seersucker) ————————
    SEERSUCKER (See Crinkle)
    This term is common in the U.S.A., and given to a plain and crimped stripe fabric either bleached or dyed, and used for drapery and furnishings as well as dress purposes. A common quality is made 40-in. wide 64 ends and 64 picks per inch, 26's warp, 20's weft. Woven from two beams in stripes of plain weave and crimp which is also plain weave. The plain ground ends are firmly weighted and the crimping ends are lightly weighted. Fancy designs are obtained by using colour or rayon in the warps. Another class of seersucker is made from a plain cotton cloth that is printed in stripes with a preparation that will resist the action of caustic soda. The cloth is passed through a concentrated solution of caustic soda and the imprinted part shrinks. The effect is that of crimped stripes.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Seersucker

См. также в других словарях:

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