CLASS 6 CHAPTER 3- Fibre to Fabric

Introduction

  • The clothes that we wear are made of different materials. Some clothes are soft, some are silky etc.
  • The bedsheets, blankets, curtains, tablecloths, towels etc. all are made from different kinds of fabric.
  • Also, we wear different types of clothes in different seasons.

History of Clothing material

  • In ancient times, people used the bark and big leaves of trees or animal skins and furs to cover themselves.
  • When people began to settle, they started tieing vines, animal fleece or hair into clothes.
  • The early Indians used fabrics made of cotton grown near the river ganga.
  • In those days people simply draped the fabric around their body because stitching was not known.
  • Now, we have large variety of clothing items and fabrics.

 

Fibre

  • A very thin hair- like strand from which cloth is prepared is known as Fibre.
  • A fabric is made of threads of yarns arranged together.

There are two types of fibres:

  1. Natural fibre
  2. Synthetic fibre

Natural Fibre

  • Fibres obtained from natural sources like plants or animals are known as Natural fibre.
  • Example: cotton and jute are obtained from plants.
  • Wool is obtained from fleece of sheep or goat.
  • Silk is obtained from cocoon of silkworms.

 

Synthetic Fibre

  • Fibres synthesised by man form chemical substances are known as synthetic fibre.
  • Example: Nylon, polyester, Rayon etc.

Cotton

  • Cotton is a white coloured soft and fluffy material.
  • Cotton is Usually grown at the places having black soil and warm climate.
  • It is grown mostly in Punjab, Maharashtra, Gujarat, Haryana etc.
  • The fruit of a cotton plant is known as cotton bolls.
  • After maturing the bolls burst open and the seeds covered by cotton fibres can been seen.
  • Cotton is mostly handpicked from these balls.
  • Thereafter, the fibres are separated from the seeds by the process of Ginning.
  • Cotton is usually used for making different clothes, curtains, carpets etc.

Jute

  • Jute fibre is obtained from the stem of a jute plant.
  • Jute is majorly grown in Bihar, West Bengal and Assam.
  • It is cultivated during rainy season.
  • The jute plant is generally harvested at its flowering stage.
  • The stems of harvested plants are immersed in water for a few days.
  • The stems rot and the fibre is handpicked.

Jute bags

Fibre to Yarn: Spinning

  • The process of making yarn from the fibre is known as Spinning.
  • In this process, a large number of fibres of cotton wool are drawn out and twisted, so that these join together to form a yarn.
  • Devices used for spinning are takli charkha and modern machines.
  • The use of charkha was popularized by Mahatma Gandhi as a part of the Independence movement.
  • After spinning, the fabric is made from yarns.

 

       

 

Yarn to Fabric

The yarn is made into fabric either by weaving or by knitting.

Weaving

  • The process of arranging two sets of yarns together to make a fabric is called weaving.
  • The weaving of yarn is done by using Looms.
  • Looms can be hand-operated known as handloom or Machine operated known as power-loom.

 

 

Knitting

  • In knitting, a single yarn is used to make a fabric.
  • Knitting can be done by hands or by machines.
  • It is mostly used to make woollen wear.

 

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