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  2. Textile, any filament, fiber, or yarn that can be made into fabric or cloth, and the resulting material itself. The term is derived from the Latin textilis and the French texere, meaning ’to weave,’ and it originally referred only to woven fabrics.

  3. textile summary | Britannica

    www.britannica.com/summary/textile

    textile, Any filament, fibre, or yarn that can be made into fabric or cloth, and the resulting material itself. The word originally referred only to woven fabrics but now includes knitted, bonded, felted, and tufted fabrics as well.

  4. Textile - Manufacturing, Fibers, Processes | Britannica

    www.britannica.com/topic/textile/The-modern-textile-industry

    Textile - Manufacturing, Fibers, Processes: Both industrialized and developing countries now have modern installations capable of highly efficient fabric production.

  5. textile - Kids | Britannica Kids | Homework Help

    kids.britannica.com/kids/article/textile/399621

    The word textile commonly means woven or knitted cloth. Lace, felt, and many other kinds of cloth are considered textiles, too. Even nets, rope, and yarn may be called textiles. People use textiles to make clothing, towels, sheets, table linens, carpets, boat sails, flags, and many other things.

  6. Textile - Weaving, Spinning, Dyeing | Britannica

    www.britannica.com/topic/textile/Production-of-fabric

    Textile - Weaving, Spinning, Dyeing: Fabric construction involves the conversion of yarns, and sometimes fibres, into a fabric having characteristics determined by the materials and methods employed. Most fabrics are presently produced by some method of interlacing, such as weaving or knitting.

  7. Textile - Weaving, Looms, Yarns | Britannica

    www.britannica.com/topic/textile/The-weaving-process

    Textile - Weaving, Looms, Yarns: Woven cloth is normally much longer in one direction than the other. The lengthwise threads are called the warp, and the other threads, which are combined with the warp and lie widthwise, are called the weft (synonyms are “filling,” “woof,” and “shoot,” or “shute”). An individual thread from the ...

  8. Textile - Dyeing, Printing, Finishing | Britannica

    www.britannica.com/topic/textile/Dyeing-and-printing

    Textile - Dyeing, Printing, Finishing: Dyeing and printing are processes employed in the conversion of raw textile fibres into finished goods that add much to the appearance of textile fabrics. Most forms of textile materials can be dyed at almost any stage.

  9. Textile - Dyeing, Printing, Finishing | Britannica

    www.britannica.com/topic/textile/Finishes-enhancing-appearance

    Textile - Dyeing, Printing, Finishing: Treatments enhancing appearance include such processes as napping and shearing, brushing, singeing, beetling, decating, tentering, calendering or pressing, moiréing, embossing, creping, glazing, polishing, and optical brightening.

  10. weaving, production of fabric by interlacing two sets of yarns so that they cross each other, normally at right angles, usually accomplished with a hand- or power-operated loom. A brief treatment of weaving follows. For further discussion, see textile: Production of fabric.

  11. Cotton Fibers, Chemical Treatment & Finishing - Britannica

    www.britannica.com/technology/mercerization

    Mercerization, in textiles, a chemical treatment applied to cotton fibres or fabrics to permanently impart a greater affinity for dyes and various chemical finishes. Mercerizing also gives cotton cloth increased tensile strength, greater absorptive properties, and, usually, a high degree of lustre,