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  2. Textile arts of the Indigenous peoples of the Americas

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Textile_arts_of_the...

    [7] Aguayos are clothes woven from camelid fibers with geometric designs that Andean women wear and use for carrying babies or goods. Inca textiles. Awasaka was the most common grade of weaving produced by the Incas of all the ancient Peruvian textiles, this was the grade most commonly used in the production of Inca clothing. Awaska was made ...

  3. Textile manufacturing by pre-industrial methods - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Textile_manufacturing_by...

    After washing, let the wool dry (air drying works best). Once it is dry, or just a bit damp, one can stretch it out a bit on a niddy-noddy. Putting the wool back on the niddy-noddy makes for a nicer looking finished skein. Before taking a skein and washing it, the skein must be tied up loosely in about six places.

  4. Textiles of Mexico - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Textiles_of_Mexico

    The textiles of Mexico have a long history. The making of fibers , cloth and other textile goods has existed in the country since at least 1400 BCE. Fibers used during the pre-Hispanic period included those from the yucca , palm and maguey plants as well as the use of cotton in the hot lowlands of the south.

  5. Wealden cloth industry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wealden_cloth_industry

    Cloth-making was, apart from iron-making, the other large-scale industry carried out on the Weald of Kent and Sussex in medieval times. The ready availability of wool from the sheep of the Romney Marsh, and the immigration from Flanders in the fourteenth century of cloth-workers – places like Cranbrook attracted hundreds of such skilled workers – ensured its place in Kentish industrial ...

  6. Navajo weaving - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Navajo_weaving

    The ratio of weft to warp threads had a fine count before the Bosque Redondo internment and declined in the following decades, then rose somewhat to a midrange ratio of five to one for the period 1920–1940. 19th-century warps were colored handspun wool or cotton string, then switched to white handspun wool in the early decades of the 20th ...

  7. History of clothing and textiles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_clothing_and...

    The king wore a tunic, and a coat that reached to his knees, with a belt in the middle. Over time, the development of the craft of wool weaving in Mesopotamia led to a great variety in clothing. Thus, towards the end of the 3rd millennium BC and later men wore tunics with short sleeves and even over the knees, with a belt (over which the rich ...

  8. Woolrich - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woolrich

    In 1998, Woolrich provided the clothing used in the film The Horse Whisperer. [5] In 2007, the company's long-time president and CEO, Roswell Brayton, Jr., died after collapsing at the Woolrich headquarters. He was a sixth generation member of the Rich family and joined the company in 1977 and became president in 1996 and CEO the next year. [17]

  9. Cowichan knitting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cowichan_knitting

    Children often start by helping out with wool processing, and begin to knit mitts and socks around the age of ten. [15] Today, as in the past, most knitting is done by women. Men often play a role by making or repairing the spinners and carders, helping with the washing or carding of the wool, and helping the women sell their works. [15]