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Unit Two

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Title: Unit Two


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?2007 Fairchild Publications, Inc.
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Textiles Fibers and Fabrics
  • The Fiber Industry
  • History and Development
  • Organization and Operation
  • Merchandising and Marketing
  • Trends in the Fiber Industry
  • The Textile Fabric Industry
  • History and Development
  • Organization and Operation
  • Merchandising and Marketing
  • Trends in the Textile Fabric Industry

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The Fiber Industry
  • Fibers are the extremely fine, hair like strands
    almost invisible to the human eye, the smallest
    element of a fabric.
  • The market breaks down into two groups
  • Natural fibers
  • Manufactured fibers

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Natural Fibers
  • Cotton Absorbs and dries quickly, is the most
    widely used of all natural fibers, and is good
    for warm weather clothing
  • Wool Absorbs and dries more slowly than cotton,
    but the natural crimping lends itself to
    insulating against the cold
  • Silk Its luxurious feel and breathable quality,
    can be worn year round

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Natural Fibers
  • Linen Absorbs and dries quickly like cotton, but
    wrinkles and is harder to iron than cotton
  • Ramie A linen like fabric, is inexpensive and
    well suited to warm weather apparel
  • Hemp Formerly used for agricultural uses (rope,
    canvas and lamp oil) is now being used for
    garments and bed linens

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Manufactured Fibers
Manufactured Fibers
  • Cellulose Fibrous substance found in the natural
    fibers of plants
  • Minimal chemical steps are employed to create
    cellulose-based fibers such as
  • Rayon (1910)
  • Acetate (1924)

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Manufactured Fibers
  • Non-Cellulose fibers Use petroleum, coal, gas,
    water, and air to create the fiber
  • These fibers are combined by chemists into
    polymers such as
  • Nylon (1938)
  • Acrylic (1950)

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Microfibers
  • One of the most important technological
    breakthroughs in recent years occurred in 1989
  • Du Pont produced a fiber two to three times
    smaller than a human hair, the thinnest and
    finest of all manufactured fibers
  • With the texture of silk or cashmere, wrinkle
    resistance, and machine washable qualities
    microfiber quickly became available in nylon,
    acrylic, and polyester

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Microfibers
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Fiber Distribution
Three ways fiber producers sell their goods
  • Unbranded No restrictions on end use, nor
    implied performance
  • Branded or trademarked Fiber quality guaranteed,
    end use of fiber (fabric) not
  • Trademarks Can only be used if the
    manufacturers fabrics or end products pass tests
    set up by the fiber producer

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Organization and Operation
  • Natural fibers produced domestically are cotton
    and wool
  • Cotton is sold in local markets (Southeast,
    Mississippi Delta, Texas panhandle and the
    Southwest) while wool is sold in a central market
    in Boston
  • Manufactured fibers are made all over the country
    and sold by the producing plant

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Advertising Fibers
  • Important for both natural and manufactured
    fibers for persuading manufacturers to choose a
    fabric
  • Manufactured fiber producers campaign more
    heavily than natural fiber producers

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Advertising Fibers
  • She has it! Du Pont, the manufacturers of Lycra,
    features denim jeans that have Lycra.

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Advertising Fibers
  • Advertising, in co-operation with manufacturers,
    benefits both primary and secondary industries
  • Greater customer awareness allows faster
    integration of new fibers into the public
    conscious
  • Retailers promote the goods that fiber producers
    subsidize advertising costs for

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History and Developmentof Textile Fabric Industry
  • First mechanized spinning process developed in
    England in the 18th century. Fibers could now be
    twisted into yarn at a rapid pace.
  • First U.S. yarn mill was built in Pawtucket,
    Rhode Island, 1790.
  • Because of higher demand, yarn mills needed
    faster weaving, hence the first power loom in
    America in 1814.
  • The industry grew rapidly, with demand for goods
    far exceeding supply.

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Production of Fabrics
  • Begins with the creation of yarn from fiber
  • Fibers are first twisted or spun into the yarn
  • Yarns are then knitted or woven into greige
    goods, or unfinished fabrics

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Textile Converters
  • Buy greige goods from mills and finish the fabric
  • Sell to manufacturer who uses it for the
    secondary market
  • Must be on top of trends and work quickly

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Fiber Producers
  • Works 18 months to two years out, while the
    fabric makers work one year out
  • Color is the most important variable, but texture
    and fabrication play large roles
  • Fabric producers also supply garment hang tags
    and care labels

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Environmental Issues
Recycling
  • Rhovyl French company, creates RhovylEco
    apparel fibers from recycled plastic water
    bottles
  • Wellman Inc. Recycles 2.5 billion plastic
    bottles annually to create their fibers
  • The U.S. floor covering industry responded by
    collecting used carpets and researching ways to
    recycle them
  • The American Textile Manufacturers Institute
    (ATMI) launched an environmental protection
    program called E3 (Encouraging Environmental
    Excellence) in 1992

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Trends in the Textile Fabric Industry
  • High-tech fabrics are constructed, finished, or
    processed to create innovative, unusual, or hard
    to achieve qualities not normally available
  • Bright futures lie ahead for these fabrics in
    activewear, rainwear, all weather wear, swimwear,
    protective clothing, heat and fire protection,
    and chemical protection
  • Even designers Alexander McQueen, Helmut Lang,
    and Miuccia Prada use innovative fibers and
    closures on their runway clothing

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Trends in the Textile Fabric Industry
  • Imports of apparel and textiles into the U.S.
    doubled from 1980 to 1986
  • But since the WTO went into effect in 1995, U.S.
    imports of textiles and apparel have increased
    90
  • As cheap imports flood the market, domestic
    textiles mills have restricted their production
    of apparel fabrics and gone into the production
    of industrial and household goods

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Trends in the Textile Fabric Industry
  • The textile industry has nearly tripled its
    exports over the past decade, exporting 20 of
    its outputroughly 16 billion a year
  • However, they must meet the ISO 9000 standards,
    international criteria designed to assess quality
    management
  • U.S. companies must be ISO certified to export to
    European companies

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Greater Diversification of Products
  • A bright spot for the domestic textile market are
    GEOTEXTILES, manufactured permeable textiles used
    for reinforcing or stabilizing civil engineering
    projects
  • Kevlar and Tyvek are industrial fabrics used for
    diverse applications from book covers to wrapping
    houses to prevent moisture penetration
  • Teflon, the non-stick cooking surface, is an
    industrial protective coating now used in
    garments to protect delicate fabrics

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Government Regulations
  • Creates a few large producers
  • Encourages higher efficiency and recycling
  • Will promote new processes to recover and
    recycle chemicals, fibers and dyes
  • Results in production of fibers with more
    ecological sensitivity
  • Encourages transfer printing to reduce dye house
    stream pollution
  • Increasingly protects and advises consumers

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New Technology in Equipment
  • Quick response uses electronic data to shorten
    the time between placement of order and delivery
    of goods
  • Bar codes help reduce inventory costs, warehouse
    time, forced markdowns and stock outs
  • Automated data transmittal has become the
    industry standard
  • The day of the fully automated textile plant is
    not far away

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New Technology in Equipment
  • The production of textiles
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