Fabric introduction—velvet



Fabric introduction—velvet Fabric introduction—velvet Its organizational structure is a weft-knitted terry weave. One side of the fabric is covered by a pile surface formed by upright fibers or yarns. The velve…

Fabric introduction—velvet

Fabric introduction—velvet
Its organizational structure is a weft-knitted terry weave. One side of the fabric is covered by a pile surface formed by upright fibers or yarns. The velvet is fine and dense, with a height of 1.5-5cm. It feels soft and resembles the velvet of a swan, hence the name velvet, which is made from terry. Knitted fabrics are made of cut loops or padded knitted fabrics with yarn loops. They are generally composed of ground yarn and pile yarn. The ground yarn is generally made of low-elastic polyester yarn or low-elastic nylon yarn. The elasticity of the ground yarn is conducive to To fix the fluff and prevent it from falling off, the fluff yarn is generally made of cotton yarn, polyester-cotton blended yarn or other short fiber yarn. The velvet yarn used in the padding tissue is generally thicker than the ground yarn.
Products can generally be interwoven with different raw materials such as cotton, mesh, viscose, polyester and nylon. According to different uses, different raw materials can be used for weaving. For velvet used for clothing, cotton yarn is generally used as terry yarn. The resulting velvet has plump fluff, soft hand feel, comfortable wearing, and beautiful appearance.
Velvet products require high-grade, low linear density, long length, and good maturity of slender, high-quality cotton. Velvet products have special requirements for the twist of terry yarn. When using cotton yarn, the twist is small and the cotton yarn twist unevenness is small. At the same time, when weaving velvet fabrics, the ground yarn should be configured with two different twist directions, while the loop yarn should be configured with the same twist direction. This will help improve the quality and feel of the velvet surface. . auYLSCgA


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