hand processing methods Hand spinningSpinning is a major industry . It is part of the textile ... s. The textiles are then fabricated into clothing clothes or other artifacts. There are three industrial processes available to spin yarn, and a handicraft community who use hand spinning techniques. Spinning is the twisting together of drawn out strands of fibres to form yarn, though it is colloquially ... through a spinneret into a medium where it hardens. Wet spinning rayon uses a coagulating medium. In dry spinning acetate and triacetate , the polymer is contained in a solvent that evaporates in the heated exit chamber. In melt spinning nylons and polyesters the extruded polymer is cooled in gas ... so they can be processed like a natural fibre. Spinning Main Cotton spinning machinery Most spinning is done using Open end spinning break or open end spinning , this is a technique where the staples ... that is continually being drawn out of the chamber. Other methods of break spinning use needles and electrostatic ... and mule spinning. It is also easily adapted for Synthetic fiber artificial fibres . The spinning ... Harvnb Collier 1970 pp 71 ref In Spinning mule mule spinning the roving is pulled off a bobbin and fed ..., or could jam the machine. The yarn is twisted through the spinning of the bobbin as the carriage moves out, and is rolled onto a cop as the carriage returns. Mule spinning produces a finer thread than the less skilled ring spinning . ref name RingMule Citation url http www.textile technology.com SST Seminars Jeremy.pdf SST Seminars title Technological Evolution in Cotton Spinning, 1878 1933 last ... was coarser, had a greater twist and was stronger so was suited to be warp. Ring spinning is slow ... and bobbin and cap spinning. Sewing thread, was made of several threads twisted together, or doubled. The pre industrial techniques of hand spinning with spindle or spinning wheel continue ... name Spinning Citation url http www.spinningtheweb.org.uk m display.php?irn 66&sub machproc&theme ... more details
A sliver rhymes with diver is a long bundle of fibre that is generally used to Spinningtextiles spin yarn. A sliver is created by carding or combing the fibre, which is then drawn into long strips where the fibre is parallel. ref http www.cotton.org pubs cottoncounts fieldtofabric yarn.cfm Yarn Production , National Cotton Council of America ref When sliver is drawn further and given a slight twist, it becomes roving . ref Freund, Kimberlie and Norton, Marjorie J.T., Broadwoven Fabrics , USITC Publication 3410 4 ISBN 1 42 895826 6 ref ref http www.depts.ttu.edu itc spinprep lab.htm Spinning Prep Combing Lab , International Textile Center ref See also ISO 2 Notes references Spinning Category Spinning Category Fibers it Nastro cardato ... more details
spindle File Ramallah spinner.jpg Ramallah man spinning wool gallery See also Distaff Leto Leto of the golden spindle Leto Timeline of clothing and textiles technology Spinning DEFAULTSORT Spindle Textiles Category Spinning br Gwerzhid cv cs V eteno textil de Handspindel es Huso eo Spindelo ...unreferenced date April 2011 Image Hunterian Psalter c. 1170 Eve spinning.jpg thumb Eve spinning, the spindle in her right hand Hunterian Psalter , ca 1170 Glasgow University Glasgow University Library File Wirtel01.png thumb Spinning with a spindle below and distaff above A spindle is a wood en spike known as the shaft used for spinningtextilesspinning wool , flax , hemp , cotton , and other fibre s into yarn thread . It is commonly weighted at either the bottom sometimes called a drop spindle middle or top, most commonly by a circular or spherical object called a whorl, and may also have a hook, groove or notch, though spindles without these are also common. Spindle whorls have been found in archaeological digs around the world. Modern spindles are commonly available in high whorl, low whorl, centre whorl, or supported varieties. In a high whorl spindle, the whorl sits very close to the top of the shaft. A hook is placed on the top of the shaft to secure the developing yarn, and the newly spun yarn is wound around the shaft underneath the whorl. In a low whorl spindle, the whorl sits near the bottom of the shaft. The newly spun yarn is wound around the shaft just above the whorl ... spinning tahkli . The spinning wheel is also used for the same purpose. The spindle in myth and legend ... and the Norse Norns work with yarns that represent lives. Because the spinning wheel was not in common use before the 16th century in Europe, the older stories are certainly referring to hand spinning ... to prick her finger on some part of a spinning wheel in modern illustrations, rather than a spindle ... ja nn Handtein no H ndtein pl Wrzeciono prz dzalnictwo qu Puchka ru simple Spindle textiles ... more details
people Dogons who believe that each stage of spinning and weaving thread is a symbolic analogy to human reproduction and resurrection. With this, they believe that the processes of spinning and weaving ... on the cloth very few are directly represented on the cloth itself. Textiles were also used ... compare themselves by how many robes they had and what they were made out of. Weaving and the textiles were and still are very important to the African culture. The textiles included both men and women ... Textiles Category Textiles Category African clothing Category Textile arts of Africa ... more details
Maya civilization cleanup date September 2009 Knowledge of pre Hispanic Mayan textiles is limited mostly to elite costumes. Huipil The most prevalent and influential aspect of women s clothing in ancient Maya is the huipil , which is still prominent in Guatemala n and Mexican culture today. The huipil is a loose rectangular garment with a hole in the middle for the head made from lightweight sheer cotton. The huipil is usually white with colorful cross stripping and zigzag designs woven into the cloth using the brocade technique still commonly used today. The huipil could be worn loose or tucked into a skirt this depends on the varying lengths of the huipil. Huipils were important displaying one s religion and tribal affiliation. Different communities tended to have different designs, colors, lengths as well as particular huipils for ceremonial purposes. It was uncommon and often disgraceful to wear a huipil design from another community within one s village although, it was a sign of respect to wear a community s huipil when visiting another village. Although, women were not just limited to their community s design. Instead the design offered an outline for what women were required ... because textiles were a significant form of art and religious beliefs. In ancient Maya women had two ... dyed. The preparation of cotton for spinning was very burdensome, as it had to be washed and picked ... textiles spindle fibers and bone picks. Bone picks were unique in that they had different designs ... significance. They would often make textiles to enhance religious power the most common way of doing ... Textiles of Oaxaca References Martin, Simon et al. 2004 Courtly Art of the Ancient Maya , London Thames ... Institution of Washington, p7 27. Schevill, Margot B. 1993 Maya Textiles of Guatemala 1st ed. Austin University of Texas Press, p8 60. textile arts Category Maya science and technology Textiles Category Maya clothing Textiles Category Maya art Textiles Category Indigenous textile art of the Americas ... more details
Image Spool of white thread.jpg thumb 230px A spool of white all purpose thread for sewing. Viewing in closeup shows the right handed Z twist as well as the tiny individual staples making up the cotton wrapping A Staple is a fiber fibre of a discrete length and may be of any composition, but a staple wool wool staple is an independent natural cluster of fibres not a single fibre. A continuous fibre such as natural silk or synthetic is known as a filament not a fibre. Etymology Extended to cotton, flax and other textiles from wool. br Of uncertain origin but possibly a back formation ref staple, n.3 . OED Online . June 2011. Oxford University Press ref arising because part of the business of a wool stapler was Wool classing to sort and class the wool according to Wool measurement quality . Staple Length File PSM V39 D189 Magnified fibers of silk wool and cotton.jpg thumb right Magnified fibres of silk, wool, and cotton Staple length, a property of staple fiber fibre s, is a term referring to the average length of a group of fibres of any composition. Staple length depends on the origin of the fibres. Natural fibers natural fibres such as cotton or wool have a range of lengths in each sample, so the staple length is an average. For synthetic fibers synthetic fibres which have been cut to certain length, the staple length is the same for every fibre in the group. Staple length is an important criterion for spinning textiles spinning fibre, as shorter fibres are more difficult to spin than longer ones, the former also resulting in more hairy yarns. For cotton and wool, staple length was originally tested by hand, the tester removing a clump of fibre and then arranging it on a dark cloth for measurement. In the 70s machines were invented to do this task, taking around 5 minutes for cotton and for wool around 20 minutes. Today, machinery can take the measurement in seconds. Extra long staple cotton Gossypium barbadense Pima cotton Gossypium barbadense , also known as extr ... more details
the Mazatec and the pa o , a Chinantec head covering. Handcrafted Oaxacan textiles employ plainweave ... and surviving historic textiles that remains in popular use. ref name Johnson, p. 227 Other symbolic ... Maya textiles External Links See hand colored photographs taken by photographer, Luis Marquez, in the 1930 ...&CISOPTR 9&CISOBOX 1&REC 1 University of Houston Digital Library DEFAULTSORT Textiles Of Oaxaca Category Textiles Oaxaca Category Oaxaca Category Mexican art Category Mesoamerican art Category Science ... more details
the community, a process which often begins with harvesting natural fibers and then spinningtextilesspinning , dyeing , and weaving textiles. In various parts of Mexico, both native backstrap ...File RuginProgressTeotitlan.JPG thumb 300px Rug in progress in Teotitlan del Valle, Oaxaca Textiles of Mexico ... textiles are both made by craftsmen and in factories. Handcrafted goods include pre Hispanic ... thumb Diego Rivera mural depicting the making of textiles in the pre Hispanic period Pre Hispanic ... Veracruzana location Veracruz, Mexico language Spanish trans title Craft textiles in Mexico Introduction ... e Historia location Mexico language Spanish trans title Evolution of textiles in Mexico after the colonial ... name despues 19th century to present File Textiles Taller 2.jpg thumb Finishing a rebozo wrap at a workshop ... ecological cite news title Los nuevos textiles ecol gicos author Gabriela Casavantes url http www2.esmas.com mujer ecomujer 099481 los nuevos textiles ecolgicos newspaper es mas location Mexico date February 3, 2010 accessdate June 1, 2010 language Spanish trans title The new ecological textiles ... of textiles, especially cotton textiles, developed earlier than in other countries outside of Western ... textiles today Indigenous tradition File WeaverZaachila2.JPG thumb Woman in Zaachila, Oaxaca ... on a backstrap loom from Hidalgo state Hidalgo . Textiles is one of Mexico s more important crafts .... Both pre Hispanic and colonial era style textiles are still made in Mexico. In addition, many ... de Turismo Estado de Mexico location Mexico State language Spanish trans title Craft textiles ... for textiles fall into two groups smooth fibers such as silk, cotton, and wool, introduced to the American ... accessdate May 30, 2010 ref Most handcrafted textiles are produced by the sixty or so indigenous ethnic groups in Mexico, who mostly live in rural areas in the center and south of the country. In these textiles ... indigenous textiles are made at home by women and used for clothing, home use, decorative use and ceremonial ... more details
TRAMA is a collective of 400 backstrap loom weaver occupation weaver s, mainly women, in Guatemala . ref name article TRAMA works with 17 weaving cooperatives, representing five regions in the Western Highlands of Guatemala Solol , Huehuetenango , Sacatep quez , Quetzaltenango and Quiche disambiguation Quich . History In 1988, after Guatemala s civil war , the association was formed to support women working in remote regions. ref name article Initially named CENAT Centro Nacional de Artesania Textile it later changed names when? date August 2010 to ASOTRAMA Asociaci n Trama and, finally, TRAMA Textiles. References Reflist refs ref name article cite web last VEDULA first MANASA title TRAMA Textiles weaves lives back together url http www.columbiamissourian.com stories 2010 03 23 trama textiles pays stephens visit accessdate 20 August 2010 ref official http tramatextiles.org http www.ammado.com nonprofit 49362 Trama Textiles http www.fairmonkey.se Hemsida 20 20engelsk Producenter Trama.htm TRAMA Textiles http www.columbiamissourian.com stories 2010 03 23 trama textiles pays stephens visit TRAMA Textiles weaves lives back together Category Companies of Guatemala Category Trade unions in Guatemala guatemala stub ... more details
For other uses, see Swift disambiguation Image UmbrellaSwift.jpg thumb A wooden umbrella swift Image Simm Stickerin.jpg thumb An umbrella swift in the background, holding a skein of red yarn A swift is a tool used to hold a skein of yarn while it is being wound off. ref name OED Swift. The Oxford English Dictionary . 2nd ed. 1989. ref It has an adjustable diameter so that it can hold skeins of many sizes, and rotates around a central rod. ref name OED ref name Interweave Handwoven Magazine. Weaving Terms. Weaving Resources. Interweave Press. March 1, 2008 http www.interweave.com weave projects articles Weaving terms.pdf . ref They are generally made out of wood or metal, however other materials may also be used. In the 18th and 19th centuries, swifts were sometimes made of whale ivory and they are now sought after antiques. Swifts are not used very much in the textile industry, but are used more by knitting knitters and crochet ers who buy their yarn in skein form. The swift allows for easy balling, without the yarn getting tangled and knotted. Types A swift can be as simple as four rods fixed into an axis, with bands connecting them. By sliding the bands the effective diameter changes, for different sized skeins. ref name OED However, most swifts are more complicated than this. The umbrella swift is one of the more common varieties, the advantage of it being that it folds up when not in use. Wooden umbrella swifts are the most common type of swift in use. They are preferred by spinning textiles hand spinners because they fold up, which is good for storage, and they are generally more stable, of higher quality, and look nicer than metal umbrella swifts. Image Spinner s Weasel.JPG thumb A spinner s weasel to the left A spinners weasel is similar to a swift, however it does not adjust to various sized skeins. While today this is a big disadvantage, as different manufacturers don t always make skeins the same size, it was not an issue when all yarn was hand spun. At th ... more details
Infobox Company company name Return Textiles, LLC. company logo File ReturnLogo.jpg 200px company type Limited liability company LLC foundation 2003 location New York, NY key people industry textile products yarn br fabric revenue num employees homepage http www.returntextiles.com www.returntextiles.com Return Textiles, LLC is a developer, manufacturer, licensor and distributor of conventional and high performance, ecologically sustainable yarns and fabrics. Return Textiles product collection has a wide range of uses in a number of industries, including fashion, outdoor, athletic, automotive, luggage, furniture, uniform, and art. Overview Return Textiles has pioneered a high performance eco textile called Bionic yarn , which blends petroleum and natural based fibers with recycled plastic bottles made of polyethylene terephthalate PET . Return Textiles product collection has a wide range of uses in a number of industries, including fashion, outdoor, athletic, automotive, luggage, furniture, uniform, and art. In late 2008, grammy winning musician Pharrell Williams joined Return Textiles as an investor and product ambassador. ref http www.wwd.com markets news pharrell williams gets bionic yarn 1880328 Pharrell Williams Gets Bionic Yarn , WWD article ref References reflist External links http www.returntextiles.com Official website http www.bionicyarn.com Bionic Yarn homepage DEFAULTSORT Return Textiles Category Textile companies of the United States Category Companies established in 2003 Category Companies based in New York City ... more details
unreferenced date February 2011 International Textiles later The Ambassador was a British export magazine for textiles and fashion. It was published in Amsterdam by Pallas Studio established by Ludwig Katz and a Haarlem publishing house nl Uitgeverij en Drukkerij De Spaarnestad De Spaarnestad . Background The half Jewish Ludwig Katz, former Advertising Manager of L. Schottlaender & Co publishers of the textile periodical Der Konfektion r , has fled with his family penniless to Holland , after the periodical was Aryanization aryerized . Nevertheless his wide business contacts facilitated his establishment of Pallas Studio and helped him to launch International Textiles on 15 December 1933. L szl Moholy Nagy became the Art Director of the magazine, dictated the total format of International Textiles and brought to bear his wide range of elementary graphic devices and their agile permutation to direct the reader s mind through forceful, clear, legible and fresh layout s. He relished the publisher s new typeface , an important feature in regulating the tri lingual text. His constant questioning of the page space and sequence, supported by judicious, visual contrasts, demonstrated how his ... anonymously. History In 1933 the magazine International Textiles was set up in Amsterdam where ... news on all aspects of international fashion and textiles. It also featured articles on the international ... publication independently during the War, both using the title International Textiles . With the end ... to The Ambassador , acting as the British export journal for textiles and fashion. The original magazine continued publication in the Netherlands under the title International Textiles . In 1946 The Ambassador ... of new organisations to promote fashion and textiles such as the Colour, Design ... the Bauhaus to the new world by Achim Borchardt Hume http www.vam.ac.uk collections textiles resources archives archive index.html Textiles in the V&A Archives Category Professional and trade magazines ... more details
2007 60 Textiles http www.organicpurewool.co.uk S A.orgtextilestandards2007.pdf ref Sodium hydroxide ... acid which is needed for the spinning process. 3 The bamboo cellulose is forced through ... reasons for using bamboo as a raw material for textiles and clothing Growth Bamboo has many advantages over cotton as a raw material for textiles. Reaching up to 35 metres tall, bamboos are the largest ... fields to increase growth rate and crop yields. References reflist DEFAULTSORT Bamboo Textiles Category Textiles Category Bamboo ... more details
of electronic materials that is more suitable for e textiles is the class of organic electronics materials ...?CRETRY 1&SRETRY 0 title Electronic Textiles Fiber Embedded Electrolyte Gated Field Effect Transistors for e Textiles work Wiley Online Library publisher John Wiley & Sons, Inc date 22 January 2009 ref ... Tech E Textiles Lab http www.xslabs.net XS Labs, Concordia University http hlt.media.mit.edu High Low ... more details
Bhutanese textiles represent a rich and complex repository of a unique art form. They are recognised for their abundunce of colour, sophistication and variation of patterns, and the intricate dyeing and weaving techniques. The weavers, who are mostly women, must not be seen merely as creator of wealth but also as the innovators and owners of artistic skills developed and nurtured over centuries of time. History File Kushuthara.jpg thumb Kushuthara The history of Bhutanese textiles becomes more evident in the last century. As textile production moved beyond the confines of clothing to artistic expression of individuals and communities, patronage from the royal household was vital. Athough the founders of the House of Wangchuck Wangchuk dynasty are from Bumthang , their ancestral home is in Lhuentse district, ref cite web title Textile Museum Of Bhutan url http en.wikipedia.org wiki Bhutan Textile Museum accessdate 18 November 2011 ref which was historically recognised as the home of the most celebrated weavers in the country. The role and influence of royal women in sustaining and furthering the weaving tradition must be acknowledged. Trongsa penlop Jigme Namgyal built the Wangdichholing palace in 1857 the loom houses thagchem accommodating 30 to 40 weavers, were built around the same time near the palace and existed until the mid 1900s. File Various Bhutanese Textiles.jpg thumb An assortment of textiles from Bhutan The sister of the second king, Ashi Wangmo, is credited to have ... s interest and intervention have revitalised Bhutanese textiles, given the industry and impetus within the country and brought world attention to Bhutanese textiles. File Bhutanese Textile.jpg thumb A Bhutanese textile Today Bhutanese textiles have reached new heights of dynamism and respect ... and landed households also professional weavers. The all encompassing use of textiles took it beyond ... Of Patterns Plain weaves Plain weave textiles are usually woven in patterns with stripes and plaids ... more details
File Kaitag.jpg thumb An early 19th century Kaitag textile Kaitag textiles are an unusual embroidery embroidered textile arts textile art form from the Kaitag district of southwest Republic of Dagestan Daghestan , Russia, inhabited mainly by Dargin people Dargins . Kaitag textiles are of simple construction, being Couching laid and couched silk embroidery thread floss embroidery on a cotton ground. The designs are generally in the style of classical Safavid Persian art, often illustrating horsemen and hunting scenes. Abstract Kaitag designs have been compared to those of Matisse and Paul Klee , though it is unlikely that either artist ever saw a Kaitag textile. Surviving examples are mostly from the 17th and 18th centuries. These embroideries were apparently made for local use in weddings, funerals, and for cradle trappings. ref http www.kunstpedia.com articles 73 1 Daghestans Kaitag Embroideries and Henri Matisse Page1.html Daghestan s Kaitag Embroideries ref Sadly, the traditional Kaitag art of embroidery was reportedly stamped out under Soviet rule. See also Suzani textile Suzani References Textile Gallery London , 1996, Textile Art of the Caucasus , exhibit catalog, privately printed. Primary source. reflist Further reading Kaitag Textile Art from Daghestan , by Robert Chenciner, 1993, Textile & Art Publications, London. ISBN 9781898406006. http www.cornucopia.net aboutkait.html Review External links http www.metropolitancarpet.com html body Kaitag antique oriental rugs.html Gallery of Kaitag textiles http www.kunstpedia.com articles 73 1 Daghestans Kaitag Embroideries and Henri Matisse Page1.html Daghestan s Kaitag Embroideries and Henri Matisse? Embroidery Category Textile arts Category Needlework Category Embroidery Category Dagestan textile arts stub ... more details
Contemporary Peruvian woman working a hand Spindle textiles spindle File Kanari awaq 01.jpg center ... 500 20363 7. External links http www.incas.org SPChinchero.htm The Center for Traditional Textiles of Cusco textile stub Textile arts DEFAULTSORT Andean Textiles Category Textile arts of the Andes Category ... more details
or singe Textiles singeing smooths the fabric by removing the fine protruding fibers on the surface ... in resistance to pilling or snag textiles snagging . These polymer finishes are also capable of imparting ... processing of textiles Textile manufacturing, Finishing References Reflist Bibliography Kadolph, Sara J., ed. Textiles , 10th edition, Pearson Prentice Hall, 2007, ISBN 0 13 118769 4, pp.  ... Kurzzeitd mpfen 1986 , 817 fabric DEFAULTSORT Finishing Textiles Category Textile arts Category Textile ... more details
shows a woman hand spinning using a drop Spindle textiles spindle . Fibers to be spun are bound to a distaff held in her left hand. Spinning is an ancient textile arts textile art in which fiber .... History main History of clothing and textiles Hand spinning File Woman spinning BM VaseD13.jpg thumb left Woman spinning. Detail from an Ancient Greece Ancient Greek Attic white ground oinochoe , ca ... main Textile manufacture during the Industrial Revolution Spinningtextiles Modern powered spinning ... Textiles and Clothing by Kate Heintz Watson . External links Commons category Spinning NoMoreLinks ... yarn . For thousands of years, fiber was spun by hand using simple tools, the Spindle textiles spindle and distaff . Only in the High Middle Ages did the spinning wheel increase the output of individual ... Revolution . Hand spinning remains a popular handicraft . Characteristics of spun yarn vary according ... A man from Ramallah spinning wool. Hand tinted photograph from 1919, restored. Image Drop spindles.jpg thumb 200px right Modern top whorl drop spindles Image Mule spinning machine at Quarry Bank Mill.jpg thumb right 200px A mule spinning machine at Quarry Bank Mill , UK The origins of spinning fiber .... ref Barber, Women s Work , 42 45. ref In the most primitive type of spinning, tufts of animal hair ... repeated over and over. The next method of twisting yarn is with the spindle textiles spindle , a straight ... in the Neolithic era. ref name Watson Watson, Textiles and Clothing , pp. 3 14 ref ref Barber, Women ... cloth and clothes, that practically all girls and unmarried women would keep busy spinning, and spinster became synonymous with an unmarried woman. Subsequent improvements with spinning wheel s and then mechanical methods made hand spinning increasingly uneconomic, but as late as the twentieth century hand spinning remained widespread in poor countries in conscious rejection of international industrialization ... or walking wheel is advantageous when using the long draw spinning long draw technique to spin wool ... more details
levels of wealth and scientific knowledge. The spinning wheel replaced the earlier method of hand spinning with a spindle textiles spindle . The first stage in mechanizing the process was mounting ...two other uses the computer animation commonly found on the Internet Spinning wheel animation the Blood, Sweat & Tears song Spinning Wheel song Image Elderlyspinnera.jpg thumb right 200px Irish spinning wheel around 1900 br Library of Congress collection A spinning wheel is a device for hand spinningspinning thread or yarn from natural or synthetic fiber synthetic fibers . Spinning wheels appeared in Asia, probably in the 11th century, and very gradually replaced hand spinning with spindle textiles spindle and distaff . Spinning machinery, such as the spinning jenny and spinning frame , displaced the spinning wheel during the Industrial Revolution . History Image Wang Juzheng s Spinning Wheel, Close Up 2.jpg thumb right 200px Detail of The Spinning Wheel , by History of Chinese art Chinese ... of the spinning wheel come from Baghdad drawn in 1237 , China c. 1270 and Europe c. 1280 , and there is evidence that spinning wheels had already come into use in both China and the Muslim world Islamic ... year 1991 publisher The MIT Press location Cambridge MA ref According to Irfan Habib , the spinning ... Elvin , 14th century Chinese technical manuals describe an automatic water powered spinning wheel ... of the automatic spinning wheel in China is an important part of Elvin s high level equilibrium ... twist. ref Spinning wheel. 2007 . In Encyclop dia Britannica. Retrieved April 7, 2007, from Encyclop dia ... of the 19th century and the mechanization of spinning. Image Woodcut Woman Spinning Detail.jpg left thumb 150px Woman spinning with a wheel, from the Elizabethan era , early 17th century In general, the spinning technology was known for a long time before being adopted by the majority of people ... needn t stop spinning to wind up the yarn. In the 18th century, the textile manufacture during the Industrial ... more details
The spinning jenny is a multi spool spinning wheel spinning frame . It was invented in 1764 by James ... as technology advanced. ref name Espinasse 1874 322 Harvnb Espinasse 1874 p 322 ref History File Spinning Jenny improved 203 Marsden.png 300px thumb The improved spinning jenny that was used in textile mills The spinning jenny is attributed to James Hargreaves . He was born in Oswaldtwistle , near Blackburn ... by doubling their productivity, and now the spinning jenny could supply that demand by increasing the spinners productivity even more. The machine produced coarse yarn. Components Image Spinning jenny.jpg 300px thumb Model of spinning jenny in the Museum of Early Industrialisation, Wuppertal , Germany .... Carding and spinning could be the only income for that dwelling, or just part of it. The family ... and return to collect the finished cloth. The weaver would organise the carding, spinning and weaving ... for the spinning, and nine for the carding. ref name E306 So by 1750, a rudimentary manufacturing ... and the pressure was on to speed up carding and spinning. The shortage of spinning capacity to feed the new and more efficient looms provided the motivation to develop more productive spinning techniques such as the spinning jenny, and triggered the start of the Industrial Revolution . Success .... The price of yarn fell, angering the large spinning community in Blackburn. Eventually they broke ... on his invention, the Spinning Jenny a machine for spinning drawing and twisting cotton. ref name ... in the past. ref name B162 Harvnb Baines 1835 p 162 ref The spinning jenny succeeded because it held ... the overall cost. The spinning jenny would not have been such a success if the flying shuttle hadn ... Harvnb Guest 1828 and could produce both weft and warp for the woollen industry. ref The spinning jenny was superseded by the spinning mule . The jenny was adapted for the process of slubbing, being ... or his wife named Jenny knocked over one of their own spinning wheels. The device kept ... more details
File Ring spinning machine in the 1920s.jpg thumb Ring spinning is a method of Spinningtextilesspinning ... Dref Friction SpinningSpinning Wheel SpinningtextilesSpinning Open End Spinning Carding Cotton ... spinning is a continuous process, unlike Spinning mule mule spinning which uses an intermittent action. In ring spinning, the roving is first attenuated by using drawing rollers, then spun and wound ... skilled labour. ref harvnb Marsden 1884 p 297 ref History Early machines File Arkwright Spinning frame Marsden 212.png thumb upright Arkwrights spinning frame The Saxony wheel was a double band treadle spinning wheel . The spindle rotated faster than the traveller in a ratio of 8 6, drawing was done ... The Emergence Of Ring Spinning In The American Textile Industry publisher Harvard Business School ... method was compared with the self acting spinning mule which was developed by Richard Roberts using ... and Doxey Ring Spinning Frame TM.png thumb upright Brooks and Doxey Ring Spinning Frame about 1890 ... Brooks and other manufacturers now worked on improving the spinning frame. The principal cause for concern ... spinning. In the states, where cotton staple was cheap, the additional labour costs of running mules ... in the raw cotton market explain Britain s continued preference for mule spinning? publisher London ... to be adopted. The first known mill in Lancashire dedicated to ring spinning was built in Milnrow for the New Ladyhouse Cotton Spinning Company registered 26 April 1877 . A cluster of smaller mills .... New technologies The search for faster and more reliable ring spinning techniques continues. In 2005 ... friction, a techniques known as Magnetic ring spinning . ref cite web url http www.freshpatents.com Ring spinning system for making yarn having a magnetically elevated ring dt20060202ptan20060022538.php title Ring spinning system for making yarn having a magnetically elevated ring accessdate 23 November 2010 ref Open end spinning was developed in Czechoslovakia in the years preceding 1967. It was far ... more details
File Masson Mills WTM 14 mules 5957.JPG thumb A pair of Condenser spinning mules. These have 741 spindles ... Brothers , of Oldham in 1927 for Elk, the last spinning mill built. Image Mule jenny.jpg thumb The only surviving example of a spinning mule built by the inventor Samuel Crompton The spinning mule ... Roberts in 1825. At its peak there were 50,000,000 mule spindles in Lancashire alone. The spinning ... the spindle. Its rival, the throstle frame or Ring spinning ring frame uses a continuous process, where the roving is drawn, twisted and wrapped in one action. The mule was the most common spinning ... yarn was being woven than the traditional spinners could supply. There were two types of spinning wheel the Spinning wheel Simple Wheel , which uses an intermittent process, and the more refined Saxony ... increase the amount of yarn spun, then took out the relevant patents. The spinning jenny allowed a group ... rollers, spinning at differing speeds these pulled the thread continuously and it was twisted by the heck ... frame driven usually by a water wheel. It was ideas from these two system that inspired the spinning mule . It was the water frame that inspired the ring spinning ring frame . The increased supply ... and stronger yarn. The ring spinning ring frame , originating in New England in the 1820s, was little ... Spinning, 1878 1933 ref The first mule File Baines 1835 Mule Jenny.png thumb An early spinning mule showing the gearing in the headstock It was Samuel Crompton who invented the spinning mule or mule ... Hargreaves spinning jenny in the same way that mule is the product of crossbreeding a mare female horse with a donkey male donkey . The spinning mule has a fixed frame with a creel of bobbins to hold ... wood. Although he used Hargreaves ideas of spinning multiple threads and of attenuating the roving ... & Kennedy ventured into spinning when they were left with two unpaid for mules ref Harvnb Catlin 1986 ... engineer Roberts self acting spinning mule 1835 diagram showing the gearing in the headstock Richard ... more details
Orphan date February 2009 Unreferenced date September 2008 A spinning newspaper is frequently shown in television and movies and is used as a transition device. At the conclusion of a story arc an image of a rapidly spinning newspaper will be displayed. The newspaper will then stop spinning and reveal a headline that reflects what happened between to the story arcs in the story, preparing the audience for the scene that follows. Because the spinning newspaper is considered a clich by many people, it has been lampooned in shows such as The Simpsons and Robot Chicken where spinning newspapers that have headlines about spinning newspapers have been shown. External links http tvtropes.org pmwiki pmwiki.php Main SpinningPaper Spinning Paper Television Tropes & Idioms Category Film and video terminology Filming stub ... more details