adj. having to do with weaving or with woven fabrics
something made of fabric, cloth, or fiber
Any fabric made from protein (silk, wool), cellulose (cotton, rayon, hemp), or synthetics (nylon, polyester).
artifact made by weaving or felting or knitting or crocheting natural or synthetic fibers; "the fabric in the curtains was light and semitraqnsparent"; "woven cloth originated in Mesopotamia around 5000 BC"; "she measured off enough material for a dress"
of or relating to fabrics or fabric making; "textile research"
a cloth, which is either woven by hand or machine
a fabric made from fibres but, as shown below, the fibres may either be converted into yarn first and then the yarns put together in one of a variety of ways to make fabrics, or the fibres can be converted directly into a fabric
a fiber or yam used for weaving or knitting into cloth
a traditionally woven fabric like cotton
A broad classification of materials that can be utilized in constructing fabrics and the fabrics made with those materials.
Fiber or yarn for weaving or knitting into fabric.
A general term used to refer to fiber, yarn, fabric, or anything made from fibers, yarns, or fabrics.
Materials that are woven, knitted, or made from cloth.
Originally, woven fabric; now applied generally to any one of the following; Staple Fibers and filaments able to be converted into woven, knit, or braided fabrics, or yarns made from natural of manufactured fibers.
A fabric or cloth manufactured by knitting or weaving. Textiles are also the products, such as yarn or fiber, used for knitting or weaving into cloth.
The resulting cloth or goods made from weaving, knitting or felting.
Enzymes used in textile processing to remove starch-based sizing, fiber preparation, pre-treatment and value-added finishing processes.
a woven or knitted fabric or cloth
Fabric or cloth, made by any number of techniques, e.g., weaving, knitting, plaiting.
That which is or may be woven. Comes from the Latin “Texere,†which means to weave. Hence any kind of fabric.
A textile is a flexible material comprised of a network of natural or artificial fibres often referred to as thread or yarn. Textiles are formed by weaving, knitting, crocheting, knotting, or pressing fibres together.