Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Finishing is the general term for a multitude of processes and treatments which a
fabric may undergo after it has been made (woven or knitted) and coloured
(dyed or printed). It is the final processing of the cloth and its purpose is to make
the fabric suitable for its intended end use. That may mean. for example, making
the fabric shrinkproof, softer, stiffer, water repellent, crease resistant or a
combination of these properties.
CLASSIFICATION OF FINISHES
Textile finishes and finishing are classified in several ways. Persons concerned
with end products (designers, merchandisers and sales personnel) usually
categorize finishes as aesthetic finishes and functional finishes. The former
modify the appearance and/or hand (feel) of fabrics, while the latter improve the
performance of a fabric under specific end use conditions.
Persons concerned with textile processing (chemists and finishers) categorize
finishes into chemical finishes and mechanical finishes. These are also called wet
finishing and dry finishing, respectively.
Finishes are also categorized by their degree of permanence. These finishes are
called permanent, durable, semi-durable and temporary.
Permanent finishes usually involve a chemical change in fibre structure and will
not change or alter throughout the life of a fabric.
Durable finishes usually last throughout the life of the article, but effectiveness
becomes diminished after each cleaning, and near the end of the normal use life
of the article, the finish is nearly removed.
PRE-TREATMENT PROCESSES
Pre-treatment processes consist of cleaning operations to rid the fabric of all soil
and additives used during the weaving or knitting process. These processes are
usually the first treatments a fabric undergoes after leaving the loom or knitting
machine and are required before any dyeing, printing or finishing can be
accomplished.
The processes consist of various types of cleaning actions, depending upon the
fibre, the impurities present and the fabric construction. In cottons, cotton blend,
silk and man-made fibres, the processes are, known generally as the boil-off. In
woolens and worsteds, it is called a scour or scouring.
RESINS
Resins are the most widely used chemicals in the textile industry. They are used
for many purposes, primarily on cellulosic and cellulosic blend fabrics.
Resins have a profound effect on and cause changes in the hand (feel),
drapability and physical characteristics of textiles. While many benefits are
achieved through these changes, there are also some shortcomings. Resins
modify fabrics in the following ways:
A. They add stiffness to fabrics and are thus used as stiffening agents or to
create a firm hand.
B. Resins stabilize fabrics in the same shape or configuration as when the resin
was cured. Fabrics cured m a smooth, nonwrinkled condition will return to that
shape after being wrinkled in wear, while fabrics cured with creases in garments
will retain these creases.
D. Fabrics will become less moisture absorbent, thus drying more rapidly. They
will also be less comfortable in warm, humid weather.
G. Resins have an affinity for oily soils, creating a soiling problem. Soil release
finishes help alleviate this objection.
IMPORTANT FINISHES
Anti-static Finishes
Anti-static finishes are chemical substances applied at the textile finishing mill
for the purpose of reducing or eliminating static. These chemicals are actually
substances which absorb small amounts of moisture from the atmosphere, thus
reducing the dryness of the fabric.
Anti-static finishes are not a truly satisfactory method for coping with the
problem of static in textiles because they are merely semi-durable. These
finishes wash out or wear out in several launderings or dry cleanings. Permanent
anti-static efrects are obtainable, however, with the man-made fibres which have
been especially modified for this purpose.
Antiseptic Finishes
Antiseptic finishes are chemical agents inhibiting the bacterial growths which
cause irritation and odour in shoes, luggage, underwear fabrics and similar
items. These finishes are low in cost, easily applied and are durable to laundering
and dry cleaning.
Calendering
Calendering is not a single type of finish. There are various types of calender
machinery, each producing different types of finished fabrics.
Crease resistant finishes are popularly known as CRF finishes. They are used on
cotton, rayon and linen because these three fibres wrinkle easily. CKF finishes
are resin finishes; the fabric is saturated with resin and then the resin is cured at
temperatures of about 360°F. The fabric becomes stiffer, less absorbent and
more resistant to wrinkling. Resin treatments also results in tensile strength loss
and reduction of abrasion resistance in cellulosic fibres. Most CRF finishes are
durable.
There are two systems to make fabrics flame resistant. The first is to use
selective fibres which have characteristic flame resistant properties. The second
is by the use of flame resistant finishes.
All of the many types of flame retardant finishes now available suffer from at
least one of the following shortcomings : (a) they cause stiffening and loss of
fabric drapability; (b) they result in significant strength loss in fabric; (c) they are
easily removed in laundering (nondurable); and (d) they become ineffective
when laundered in household bleach, with soaps or with water softeners.
Fulling
Mercerization
Mercerization is one of the most important of all cotton finishes. This finish
imparts luster to the cotton, increases its strength by nearly 25% and improves
dye affinity, producing brighter shades than unmercerized cotton. It also
enhances the hand as well as uses less dye to achieve the same depth of shade.
The finish consists of treating the material while under tension with cold,
concentrated sodium hydroxide solution. Both fabrics and yarns can be
mercerized, but fibres cannot. Mercerization is a permanent finish.
Napping
Napped fabrics have a softer hand and provide better insulation than the same
materials unnapped because they can entrap more air; hence, their wide use in
blankets, sleepwear and winter clothing. However, the insulating value of cotton
and rayon napped fabrics is not long lasting. The low resilience of these fibres
causes premature flattening of the fibre nap.The nap can partially be restored by
frequent brushing.
Plisse
Plisse is the name of a finish as well as the name of a fabric treated with this
finish. It is a permanent finish, produced on cotton by the action of sodium
hydroxide; but unlike mercerizing, no tension is used. The sodium hydroxide is
printed on the fabric in the form of a paste.The fabric shrinks only where the
sodium hydroxide is applied, producing a puckered effect.
Shearing
Shearing is a process used to cut off surface fibres on fabrics. It makes uniform
the surface of napped fabrics. Most cut pile fabrics are also sheared to provide
uniform pile height.
Soil release finishes in fabrics permit relatively easy removal of soils (especially
oily soils) with ordinary home laundering.
There are several types of soil release finishes. All of them accomplish the end
result of making the fibre more absorbent (hydrophilic), thus permitting better
“wettability" for improved soil removal.
Most soil release finishes are applied at the same time that the resins are applied
to textiles. Most are durable through 40 to 50 launderings and are routinely
applied to fabrics for work clothes and table cloths. They are also often applied
to fabrics for slacks and skirts.
Several other benefits arise from the use of soil release finishes in durable press
fabrics because of their increased absorbency. These include: improved
antistatic properties, improved fabric drapability and somewhat greater comfort
in hot weather.
Denim Finishes
Textile Dyeing-4
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Textile Finishing
Finishing is the general term for a multitude of processes and treatments which a
fabric may undergo after it has been made (woven or knitted) and coloured
(dyed or printed). It is the final processing of the cloth and its purpose is to make
the fabric suitable for its intended end use. That may mean. for example, making
the fabric shrinkproof, softer, stiffer, water repellent, crease resistant or a
combination of these properties.
CLASSIFICATION OF FINISHES
Textile finishes and finishing are classified in several ways. Persons concerned
with end products (designers, merchandisers and sales personnel) usually
categorize finishes as aesthetic finishes and functional finishes. The former
modify the appearance and/or hand (feel) of fabrics, while the latter improve the
performance of a fabric under specific end use conditions.
Persons concerned with textile processing (chemists and finishers) categorize
finishes into chemical finishes and mechanical finishes. These are also called wet
finishing and dry finishing, respectively.
Finishes are also categorized by their degree of permanence. These finishes are
called permanent, durable, semi-durable and temporary.
Permanent finishes usually involve a chemical change in fibre structure and will
not change or alter throughout the life of a fabric.
Durable finishes usually last throughout the life of the article, but effectiveness
becomes diminished after each cleaning, and near the end of the normal use life
of the article, the finish is nearly removed.
PRE-TREATMENT PROCESSES
Pre-treatment processes consist of cleaning operations to rid the fabric of all soil
and additives used during the weaving or knitting process. These processes are
usually the first treatments a fabric undergoes after leaving the loom or knitting
machine and are required before any dyeing, printing or finishing can be
accomplished.
The processes consist of various types of cleaning actions, depending upon the
fibre, the impurities present and the fabric construction. In cottons, cotton blend,
silk and man-made fibres, the processes are, known generally as the boil-off. In
woolens and worsteds, it is called a scour or scouring.
RESINS
Resins are the most widely used chemicals in the textile industry. They are used
for many purposes, primarily on cellulosic and cellulosic blend fabrics.
Resins have a profound effect on and cause changes in the hand (feel),
drapability and physical characteristics of textiles. While many benefits are
achieved through these changes, there are also some shortcomings. Resins
modify fabrics in the following ways:
A. They add stiffness to fabrics and are thus used as stiffening agents or to
create a firm hand.
B. Resins stabilize fabrics in the same shape or configuration as when the resin
was cured. Fabrics cured m a smooth, nonwrinkled condition will return to that
shape after being wrinkled in wear, while fabrics cured with creases in garments
will retain these creases.
C. Yarns in fabric will be stabilized and will resist shrinkage in laundering.
D. Fabrics will become less moisture absorbent, thus drying more rapidly. They
will also be less comfortable in warm, humid weather.
G. Resins have an affinity for oily soils, creating a soiling problem. Soil release
finishes help alleviate this objection.
IMPORTANT FINISHES
Anti-static Finishes
Anti-static finishes are chemical substances applied at the textile finishing mill
for the purpose of reducing or eliminating static. These chemicals are actually
substances which absorb small amounts of moisture from the atmosphere, thus
reducing the dryness of the fabric.
Anti-static finishes are not a truly satisfactory method for coping with the
problem of static in textiles because they are merely semi-durable. These
finishes wash out or wear out in several launderings or dry cleanings. Permanent
anti-static efrects are obtainable, however, with the man-made fibres which have
been especially modified for this purpose.
Antiseptic Finishes
Antiseptic finishes are chemical agents inhibiting the bacterial growths which
cause irritation and odour in shoes, luggage, underwear fabrics and similar
items. These finishes are low in cost, easily applied and are durable to laundering
and dry cleaning.
Calendering
Calendering is not a single type of finish. There are various types of calender
machinery, each producing different types of finished fabrics.
Crease resistant finishes are popularly known as CRF finishes. They are used on
cotton, rayon and linen because these three fibres wrinkle easily. CKF finishes
are resin finishes; the fabric is saturated with resin and then the resin is cured at
temperatures of about 360°F. The fabric becomes stiffer, less absorbent and
more resistant to wrinkling. Resin treatments also results in tensile strength loss
and reduction of abrasion resistance in cellulosic fibres. Most CRF finishes are
durable.
There are two systems to make fabrics flame resistant. The first is to use
selective fibres which have characteristic flame resistant properties. The second
is by the use of flame resistant finishes.
All of the many types of flame retardant finishes now available suffer from at
least one of the following shortcomings : (a) they cause stiffening and loss of
fabric drapability; (b) they result in significant strength loss in fabric; (c) they are
easily removed in laundering (nondurable); and (d) they become ineffective
when laundered in household bleach, with soaps or with water softeners.
Fulling
Mercerization
Mercerization is one of the most important of all cotton finishes. This finish
imparts luster to the cotton, increases its strength by nearly 25% and improves
dye affinity, producing brighter shades than unmercerized cotton. It also
enhances the hand as well as uses less dye to achieve the same depth of shade.
The finish consists of treating the material while under tension with cold,
concentrated sodium hydroxide solution. Both fabrics and yarns can be
mercerized, but fibres cannot. Mercerization is a permanent finish.
Napping
Napping is a mechanical finish in which woven or knitted fabrics are passed
against rotating, bristled wire-covered brushes. This action results in fibres
actually being raised from the fabric. The overall effect is a fabric with raised
fibre surface.
Napped fabrics have a softer hand and provide better insulation than the same
materials unnapped because they can entrap more air; hence, their wide use in
blankets, sleepwear and winter clothing. However, the insulating value of cotton
and rayon napped fabrics is not long lasting. The low resilience of these fibres
causes premature flattening of the fibre nap.The nap can partially be restored by
frequent brushing.
Plisse
Plisse is the name of a finish as well as the name of a fabric treated with this
finish. It is a permanent finish, produced on cotton by the action of sodium
hydroxide; but unlike mercerizing, no tension is used. The sodium hydroxide is
printed on the fabric in the form of a paste.The fabric shrinks only where the
sodium hydroxide is applied, producing a puckered effect.
Shearing
Shearing is a process used to cut off surface fibres on fabrics. It makes uniform
the surface of napped fabrics. Most cut pile fabrics are also sheared to provide
uniform pile height.
Soil release finishes in fabrics permit relatively easy removal of soils (especially
oily soils) with ordinary home laundering.
There are several types of soil release finishes. All of them accomplish the end
result of making the fibre more absorbent (hydrophilic), thus permitting better
“wettability" for improved soil removal.
Most soil release finishes are applied at the same time that the resins are applied
to textiles. Most are durable through 40 to 50 launderings and are routinely
applied to fabrics for work clothes and table cloths. They are also often applied
to fabrics for slacks and skirts.
Several other benefits arise from the use of soil release finishes in durable press
fabrics because of their increased absorbency. These include: improved
antistatic properties, improved fabric drapability and somewhat greater comfort
in hot weather.
The purpose of this blog is to share some of the knowledge bits that I have
gathered from my experience in textile industry. If you find something useful
here and would like to contribute to support my effort, please consider donating
by clicking the link given below. Thanks.
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executive and as a teacher of Textile Technology and Textile Design. Currently
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Textile Finishing
Finishing is the general term for a multitude of processes and treatments which a fabric may
undergo after it has been made (woven or knitted) and coloured (dyed or printed). It is the
final processing of the cloth and its purpose is to make the fabric suitable for its intended end
use. That may mean. for example, making the fabric shrinkproof, softer, stiffer, water
repellent, crease resistant or a combination of these properties.
CLASSIFICATION OF FINISHES
Textile finishes and finishing are classified in several ways. Persons concerned with end
products (designers, merchandisers and sales personnel) usually categorize finishes as
aesthetic finishes and functional finishes. The former modify the appearance and/or hand
(feel) of fabrics, while the latter improve the performance of a fabric under specific end use
conditions.
Persons concerned with textile processing (chemists and finishers) categorize finishes into
chemical finishes and mechanical finishes. These are also called wet finishing and dry
finishing, respectively.
Finishes are also categorized by their degree of permanence. These finishes are called
permanent, durable, semi-durable and temporary.
Permanent finishes usually involve a chemical change in fibre structure and will not change
or alter throughout the life of a fabric.
Durable finishes usually last throughout the life of the article, but effectiveness becomes
diminished after each cleaning, and near the end of the normal use life of the article, the
finish is nearly removed.
Semi-durable finishes last through several launderings or dry cleanings and many are
renewable in home laundering or dry cleaning.
Temporary finishes are removed or substantially diminished the first time an article is
laundered or dry cleaned.
PRE-TREATMENT PROCESSES
Pre-treatment processes consist of cleaning operations to rid the fabric of all soil and
additives used during the weaving or knitting process. These processes are usually the first
treatments a fabric undergoes after leaving the loom or knitting machine and are required
before any dyeing, printing or finishing can be accomplished.
The processes consist of various types of cleaning actions, depending upon the fibre, the
impurities present and the fabric construction. In cottons, cotton blend, silk and man-made
fibres, the processes are, known generally as the boil-off. In woolens and worsteds, it is
called a scour or scouring.
RESINS
Resins are the most widely used chemicals in the textile industry. They are used for many
purposes, primarily on cellulosic and cellulosic blend fabrics.
Resins have a profound effect on and cause changes in the hand (feel), drapability and
physical characteristics of textiles. While many benefits are achieved through these changes,
there are also some shortcomings. Resins modify fabrics in the following ways:
A. They add stiffness to fabrics and are thus used as stiffening agents or to create a firm hand.
B. Resins stabilize fabrics in the same shape or configuration as when the resin was cured.
Fabrics cured m a smooth, nonwrinkled condition will return to that shape after being
wrinkled in wear, while fabrics cured with creases in garments will retain these creases.
D. Fabrics will become less moisture absorbent, thus drying more rapidly. They will also be
less comfortable in warm, humid weather.
E. Resins combine chemically with cellulosic fibres (cotton, rayon,ete.) to cause significant
reductions in abrasion resistance, breaking strength and tear strength. This reduction can be
as high as 50%.
F. Most resins produce an offensive "fish-like" or formaldehyde odour in fabric. This odour
eventually disappears on exposure to air and/or laundering.
G. Resins have an affinity for oily soils, creating a soiling problem. Soil release finishes help
alleviate this objection.
IMPORTANT FINISHES
Anti-static Finishes
Anti-static finishes are chemical substances applied at the textile finishing mill for the
purpose of reducing or eliminating static. These chemicals are actually substances which
absorb small amounts of moisture from the atmosphere, thus reducing the dryness of the
fabric.
Anti-static finishes are not a truly satisfactory method for coping with the problem of static in
textiles because they are merely semi-durable. These finishes wash out or wear out in several
launderings or dry cleanings. Permanent anti-static efrects are obtainable, however, with the
man-made fibres which have been especially modified for this purpose.
Antiseptic Finishes
Antiseptic finishes are chemical agents inhibiting the bacterial growths which cause irritation
and odour in shoes, luggage, underwear fabrics and similar items. These finishes are low in
cost, easily applied and are durable to laundering and dry cleaning.
Calendering
Calendering is not a single type of finish. There are various types of calender machinery,
each producing different types of finished fabrics.
Crease resistant finishes are popularly known as CRF finishes. They are used on cotton,
rayon and linen because these three fibres wrinkle easily. CKF finishes are resin finishes; the
fabric is saturated with resin and then the resin is cured at temperatures of about 360°F. The
fabric becomes stiffer, less absorbent and more resistant to wrinkling. Resin treatments also
results in tensile strength loss and reduction of abrasion resistance in cellulosic fibres. Most
CRF finishes are durable.
There are two systems to make fabrics flame resistant. The first is to use selective fibres
which have characteristic flame resistant properties. The second is by the use of flame
resistant finishes.
All of the many types of flame retardant finishes now available suffer from at least one of the
following shortcomings : (a) they cause stiffening and loss of fabric drapability; (b) they
result in significant strength loss in fabric; (c) they are easily removed in laundering
(nondurable); and (d) they become ineffective when laundered in household bleach, with
soaps or with water softeners.
Fulling
Fulling is a permanent finish used on wool fabrics; it is also known as milling or felting. The
process is a carefully controlled scouring or laundering process to induce felting shrinkage in
wool fabrics. The resultant fulled fabric is smoother, more compact and has yarns more
tightly embedded than an unfulled fabric. Woolens are frequently heavily fulled.
Mercerization
Mercerization is one of the most important of all cotton finishes. This finish imparts luster to
the cotton, increases its strength by nearly 25% and improves dye affinity, producing brighter
shades than unmercerized cotton. It also enhances the hand as well as uses less dye to achieve
the same depth of shade. The finish consists of treating the material while under tension with
cold, concentrated sodium hydroxide solution. Both fabrics and yarns can be mercerized, but
fibres cannot. Mercerization is a permanent finish.
Napping
Napping is a mechanical finish in which woven or knitted fabrics are passed against rotating,
bristled wire-covered brushes. This action results in fibres actually being raised from the
fabric. The overall effect is a fabric with raised fibre surface.
Napped fabrics have a softer hand and provide better insulation than the same materials
unnapped because they can entrap more air; hence, their wide use in blankets, sleepwear and
winter clothing. However, the insulating value of cotton and rayon napped fabrics is not long
lasting. The low resilience of these fibres causes premature flattening of the fibre nap.The nap
can partially be restored by frequent brushing.
Plisse
Plisse is the name of a finish as well as the name of a fabric treated with this finish. It is a
permanent finish, produced on cotton by the action of sodium hydroxide; but unlike
mercerizing, no tension is used. The sodium hydroxide is printed on the fabric in the form of
a paste.The fabric shrinks only where the sodium hydroxide is applied, producing a puckered
effect.
Shearing
Shearing is a process used to cut off surface fibres on fabrics. It makes uniform the surface of
napped fabrics. Most cut pile fabrics are also sheared to provide uniform pile height.
Soil release finishes in fabrics permit relatively easy removal of soils (especially oily soils)
with ordinary home laundering.
There are several types of soil release finishes. All of them accomplish the end result of
making the fibre more absorbent (hydrophilic), thus permitting better “wettability" for
improved soil removal.
Most soil release finishes are applied at the same time that the resins are applied to textiles.
Most are durable through 40 to 50 launderings and are routinely applied to fabrics for work
clothes and table cloths. They are also often applied to fabrics for slacks and skirts.
Several other benefits arise from the use of soil release finishes in durable press fabrics
because of their increased absorbency. These include: improved antistatic properties,
improved fabric drapability and somewhat greater comfort in hot weather.
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Textile Finishing
Finishing is the general term for a multitude of processes and treatments which a fabric may
undergo after it has been made (woven or knitted) and coloured (dyed or printed). It is the
final processing of the cloth and its purpose is to make the fabric suitable for its intended end
use. That may mean. for example, making the fabric shrinkproof, softer, stiffer, water
repellent, crease resistant or a combination of these properties.
CLASSIFICATION OF FINISHES
Textile finishes and finishing are classified in several ways. Persons concerned with end
products (designers, merchandisers and sales personnel) usually categorize finishes as
aesthetic finishes and functional finishes. The former modify the appearance and/or hand
(feel) of fabrics, while the latter improve the performance of a fabric under specific end use
conditions.
Persons concerned with textile processing (chemists and finishers) categorize finishes into
chemical finishes and mechanical finishes. These are also called wet finishing and dry
finishing, respectively.
Finishes are also categorized by their degree of permanence. These finishes are called
permanent, durable, semi-durable and temporary.
Permanent finishes usually involve a chemical change in fibre structure and will not change
or alter throughout the life of a fabric.
Durable finishes usually last throughout the life of the article, but effectiveness becomes
diminished after each cleaning, and near the end of the normal use life of the article, the
finish is nearly removed.
Semi-durable finishes last through several launderings or dry cleanings and many are
renewable in home laundering or dry cleaning.
Temporary finishes are removed or substantially diminished the first time an article is
laundered or dry cleaned.
PRE-TREATMENT PROCESSES
Pre-treatment processes consist of cleaning operations to rid the fabric of all soil and
additives used during the weaving or knitting process. These processes are usually the first
treatments a fabric undergoes after leaving the loom or knitting machine and are required
before any dyeing, printing or finishing can be accomplished.
The processes consist of various types of cleaning actions, depending upon the fibre, the
impurities present and the fabric construction. In cottons, cotton blend, silk and man-made
fibres, the processes are, known generally as the boil-off. In woolens and worsteds, it is
called a scour or scouring.
RESINS
Resins are the most widely used chemicals in the textile industry. They are used for many
purposes, primarily on cellulosic and cellulosic blend fabrics.
Resins have a profound effect on and cause changes in the hand (feel), drapability and
physical characteristics of textiles. While many benefits are achieved through these changes,
there are also some shortcomings. Resins modify fabrics in the following ways:
A. They add stiffness to fabrics and are thus used as stiffening agents or to create a firm hand.
B. Resins stabilize fabrics in the same shape or configuration as when the resin was cured.
Fabrics cured m a smooth, nonwrinkled condition will return to that shape after being
wrinkled in wear, while fabrics cured with creases in garments will retain these creases.
D. Fabrics will become less moisture absorbent, thus drying more rapidly. They will also be
less comfortable in warm, humid weather.
E. Resins combine chemically with cellulosic fibres (cotton, rayon,ete.) to cause significant
reductions in abrasion resistance, breaking strength and tear strength. This reduction can be
as high as 50%.
F. Most resins produce an offensive "fish-like" or formaldehyde odour in fabric. This odour
eventually disappears on exposure to air and/or laundering.
G. Resins have an affinity for oily soils, creating a soiling problem. Soil release finishes help
alleviate this objection.
IMPORTANT FINISHES
Anti-static Finishes
Anti-static finishes are chemical substances applied at the textile finishing mill for the
purpose of reducing or eliminating static. These chemicals are actually substances which
absorb small amounts of moisture from the atmosphere, thus reducing the dryness of the
fabric.
Anti-static finishes are not a truly satisfactory method for coping with the problem of static in
textiles because they are merely semi-durable. These finishes wash out or wear out in several
launderings or dry cleanings. Permanent anti-static efrects are obtainable, however, with the
man-made fibres which have been especially modified for this purpose.
Antiseptic Finishes
Antiseptic finishes are chemical agents inhibiting the bacterial growths which cause irritation
and odour in shoes, luggage, underwear fabrics and similar items. These finishes are low in
cost, easily applied and are durable to laundering and dry cleaning.
Calendering
Calendering is not a single type of finish. There are various types of calender machinery,
each producing different types of finished fabrics.
Crease resistant finishes are popularly known as CRF finishes. They are used on cotton,
rayon and linen because these three fibres wrinkle easily. CKF finishes are resin finishes; the
fabric is saturated with resin and then the resin is cured at temperatures of about 360°F. The
fabric becomes stiffer, less absorbent and more resistant to wrinkling. Resin treatments also
results in tensile strength loss and reduction of abrasion resistance in cellulosic fibres. Most
CRF finishes are durable.
All of the many types of flame retardant finishes now available suffer from at least one of the
following shortcomings : (a) they cause stiffening and loss of fabric drapability; (b) they
result in significant strength loss in fabric; (c) they are easily removed in laundering
(nondurable); and (d) they become ineffective when laundered in household bleach, with
soaps or with water softeners.
Fulling
Fulling is a permanent finish used on wool fabrics; it is also known as milling or felting. The
process is a carefully controlled scouring or laundering process to induce felting shrinkage in
wool fabrics. The resultant fulled fabric is smoother, more compact and has yarns more
tightly embedded than an unfulled fabric. Woolens are frequently heavily fulled.
Mercerization
Mercerization is one of the most important of all cotton finishes. This finish imparts luster to
the cotton, increases its strength by nearly 25% and improves dye affinity, producing brighter
shades than unmercerized cotton. It also enhances the hand as well as uses less dye to achieve
the same depth of shade. The finish consists of treating the material while under tension with
cold, concentrated sodium hydroxide solution. Both fabrics and yarns can be mercerized, but
fibres cannot. Mercerization is a permanent finish.
Napping
Napping is a mechanical finish in which woven or knitted fabrics are passed against rotating,
bristled wire-covered brushes. This action results in fibres actually being raised from the
fabric. The overall effect is a fabric with raised fibre surface.
Napped fabrics have a softer hand and provide better insulation than the same materials
unnapped because they can entrap more air; hence, their wide use in blankets, sleepwear and
winter clothing. However, the insulating value of cotton and rayon napped fabrics is not long
lasting. The low resilience of these fibres causes premature flattening of the fibre nap.The nap
can partially be restored by frequent brushing.
Plisse
Plisse is the name of a finish as well as the name of a fabric treated with this finish. It is a
permanent finish, produced on cotton by the action of sodium hydroxide; but unlike
mercerizing, no tension is used. The sodium hydroxide is printed on the fabric in the form of
a paste.The fabric shrinks only where the sodium hydroxide is applied, producing a puckered
effect.
Shearing
Shearing is a process used to cut off surface fibres on fabrics. It makes uniform the surface of
napped fabrics. Most cut pile fabrics are also sheared to provide uniform pile height.
Soil release finishes in fabrics permit relatively easy removal of soils (especially oily soils)
with ordinary home laundering.
There are several types of soil release finishes. All of them accomplish the end result of
making the fibre more absorbent (hydrophilic), thus permitting better “wettability" for
improved soil removal.
Most soil release finishes are applied at the same time that the resins are applied to textiles.
Most are durable through 40 to 50 launderings and are routinely applied to fabrics for work
clothes and table cloths. They are also often applied to fabrics for slacks and skirts.
Several other benefits arise from the use of soil release finishes in durable press fabrics
because of their increased absorbency. These include: improved antistatic properties,
improved fabric drapability and somewhat greater comfort in hot weather.
The purpose of this blog is to share some of the knowledge bits that I have gathered from my
experience in textile industry. If you find something useful here and would like to contribute
to support my effort, please consider donating by clicking the link given below. Thanks.
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About Me
Priyank Goyal
Hi, I’m Priyank Goyal and I write these blogs to pour some of the thoughts that come
across my mind as well as to help me, my colleagues and students. I started these
blogs in 2006 .A Textile Engineer and a Fashion Management graduate from NIFT
New Delhi, I have more than fourteen years of experience working as a fabric
buyer,apparel retail consultant, project coordinator, weaving executive and as a
teacher of Textile Technology and Textile Design. Currently working as Senior Buyer
(Garment Fabric and Accessories) in a retail organisation in India.To contact me,
please email pg2000in (at) gmail.com
View my complete profile
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