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1 Jute Fabrics
These are mostly plain weave from coarse yarns, such as known under the following: Bagging, brattice cloth, buckram, hessians, scrims, tarpaulin, sacking, etc. Carpet fabrics are also made for stairs, etc., and twill cloths for matting, sacks, etc. -
2 ютена тъкан
jute fabricjute fabrics -
3 джутовые ткани
1) Textile: Jute goods2) Makarov: jute fabrics -
4 Belgian Bagging Fabric
Jute fabrics for sugar are woven without the use of oil, and oil substitutes are used in the batching mixtures. This is because the hot moist sugar when packed into the bags will absorb some of the oil if present. The construction is otherwise the same as ordinary sugar bags.Dictionary of the English textile terms > Belgian Bagging Fabric
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5 Silvalin
A yarn manufactured from cellulose pulp, wood, bamboo, cotton, linen, jute, waste or any vegetable fibre. It is made under the Kron patented method of manufacture which has been very successful in Germany. Fabrics made of 100 per cent Silvalin include mattings, carpets, bagging, druggets, braids and cords. Others with 25 per cent to 50 per cent cotton warp are tapestries, chair covers, cretonnes, bedticks, tablecloths, etc. Fabrics of jute, wool and flax warps with Silvalin weft have also been made. -
6 Brussels Carpets
Uncut pile fabrics, in which the worsted yarn used forms part of the fabric itself as well as the figure, and is woven through the cloth from back to face. These carpets are known as three-frame, four-frame, five-frame, etc., carpets. Each frame has a capacity of 256 bobbins of one colour, so in a five-frame fabric there are five colours, and in each dent of the reed there are five pile threads and two ground threads. The five-frame Brussels thus means five colours are used for figuring. Round wires are used (up to nine per inch) to form the pile, and these are withdrawn from the side of the cloth. A low imitation is made from coarse linen and jute yarns, and called Brusselette. -
7 Dundee Fabric
A general term including crash, bagging, burlap and other coarse fabrics, made at Dundee of jute, hemp and flax. -
8 Fibrilia
A term used many years ago for the fibres and fabrics made from flax, hemp, jute, and ramie; used as substitutes by mixing with cotton and sometimes with wool. -
9 Floorcloth
Fabrics woven from jute or hemp yarns in plain weave and saturated in waterproof material. Then they are painted, varnished or printed. Used for cheap floor covering' (see Linoleum) -
10 Helicteres Fibre
A fibre obtained from a plant that is found in most forests of the Indian plains. It is suitable for most fabrics. made from jute. It does not readily rot and has great resistance to changes of moisture and heat. -
11 Persening
Waterproofed jute and linen fabrics. -
12 Sacking
A general term to include fabrics of jute, hemp and tow yarns, made for the manufacture of sacks for sugar, coal, etc. Very coarse yarns are used and there are few ends and picks per inch (from 6 to 12)
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