Obtained from The Worshipful Company of Weavers
Term | Main definition |
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fabric | |
fabric care | |
fabric widths | Standard fabric widths in centimetres and inches: 65 cm 25 in dress |
fancy yarn | Decorative yarns used in weaving or knitting which are usually produced from a combination of two or three of the same or different single, 2-fold or three-fold yarns. Often made on conventional doubling machinery or on specialized machines. Fancy yarns include: spiral, loop, gimp, cloud, knop, eccentric, stripe, slub, snarl or chenille types. |
fastness | This term applies to the resistance to change or fading, either by water, washing with soap or detergent or by daylight, which the dye possesses. Sometimes referred to as colour-fastness. |
fell | |
felt | A cloth formed directly from fibre without the formal structure of a weave or knit. Usually short staple loose wool fibre or noil compacted together by milling with soapy water. Some felts can be made with a combination of wool and cotton, rayon or sometimes kapok. Compared with wool felt, fur felt is softer, smoother and is often more water resistant. Fur felt, used in hat production, can be made from the short fibres of rabbit, muskrat and the better grades of beaver. Felt is probably the earliest form of fabric. Nomads all over Asia were able to travel through extreme terrain and climates using felt for protection. In the fourth century BC China was called \'the land of felt\'. |
fents | |
fibre length | The length of each individual natural or man-made fibre. See staple length. |
fibroin | A protein chemical substance which is the chief constituent of silk, not soluble in water and which forms the core of the silk filament. |
flax | |
fleece | |
floss | |
fly-shuttle | The fly-shuttle technology is the basis of all power shuttle looms and some handlooms where a batten is used. The shuttle is propelled from side to side by being hit with a picking stick or picker. |
folding |