Recently,
I was
told I did not have
enough knowledge to teach a materials class. I was surprised at
first, and a tad upset, but I assume the individual was going off a brief
conversation while discussing the class dynamics, specifically textiles.
Here is
what I do know. Textiles are the most universal and efficient method to
introduce texture and patterns to a design. This could also add color to the
interior by the reflective surface and the various styles of the materials. In
the design industry, today the market can offer styles of textiles ranging from
contemporary, traditional, and transitional. These textiles are available in
natural fibers and synthetic fibers that typically are man-made. Pricing the
textiles, the function of capacity of the textiles and the aspects of the
textiles technically, can dictate the selection process.
The
primary consideration for the designer is the process of spinning the yarn and
the construction. This is how the designer will determine the durability of the
textiles used in each job. Spinning
the yarn conditions the character or profile of material. This is called the
denier or thickness of the yarn thread. The texture of the yarn can be twisted,
slubbed, or smooth. The construction
is the process of creating a weave that is tight, close-set or open-set cloth.
These range from a sheet sample of material to a netting sample like stocking
or webbing. It is also measured by the thread knots per square inch.
Construction is the interweaving of the
yarn. This yarn is the warp or filler yarn that is laced to create a weave.
This process creates a knit, a hooked loop, or tufting of the materials. When I
worked for the rug department at my previous job, I learned that this was a
process of creating carpets punched by lines of needles that inject yarn into the
fabric backing, usually woven or rubberized. This can be said for textiles in a
fabric capacity as well.
Another
construction process used for nonwoven fabric is the process of felting where loose fibers adhere to
each other under high pressure. Determining if a textile is durable or
maintainable it will depend on the fibers used and how the fiber is spun and
constructed. These fibers can be classified in two ways, the synthetic fiber or the natural
fiber. Each style has a subdivision.
Synthetic
fibers are cellulosic fibers that are
an organic compounds found in vegetation like plants. These examples are acetate, rayon, or triacetate.
Non-cellulosic fibers are
made from
polymers or glass products. These non-cellulosic
fibers are the most common products used in more than one resource than
just textiles. These are nylons,
acrylics, olefin, polyester and a few others. One can tell if a fiber is
unnatural by the way he or she observes a glassy or twinkly sheen when looking
at the surface or hand of a textile at an angle.
Natural
fibers can also come from plants or animals. Natural plant fibers are hemp, flax, jute, cotton, and ramie, which is a bark from the nettle
bush. Animal fibers consist of wool, hair, and silk. Other natural fibers can
come from metal like gold leafing or threads, copper, and silver. These natural
fibers were used over 5000 years B.C., yet because they are so durable
and resilient, these natural fibers are still used in today’s manufacturing of textile fabrications.
Hemp is the most durable of natural fibers and
originally this fiber was exclusively used for ropes, and burlaps. Today hemp is used in
some of the finest fashions for the durability and the ability to manufacture
this fiber extremely soft. A way to sample this and other textile breakthroughs
are through testing the fibers
whether natural or synthetic for longevity and sustainability. Testing is the only assurance that
manufacturers have in a product that will last the standard five to eight year
lifespan of performance. Some of the performance issues are soil resistance and flame retardant. This characteristic is achieved by chemical
applications like Scotchgard and Zepel. Both products can protect textiles
surfaces from liquid, soil, and flame damage to the weave.
Weaving, as mentioned before, is achieved through
construction. This is the process to loom by hand or machine and create a
lacing effect of fibers. The shuttle will loom yarn through raised warp yarns
creating a weave in and out. There are three methods in weaving a textile the
first is a plain weave (later this
was called taffeta),
the second is satin, and the third is
twill. Twill is used to create
durable garments like a tweed jacket or bag. All three basic weaves are the
same variation of the plain weave. The only difference is how dense the loom
weaves the yarn with different fillers creating a selvage as a return. There
are five different weaves available with basic taffeta, satin, twill, pile, and
leno. The most durable—historical— fiber used in modern textiles is hemp and will continue to
improve with age.
Well,
that is what I know and I am sticking to it.
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