KNOW ABOUT LINEN FIBRE - YARN & FABRIC
Linen Fiber:
Linen is the most costly and luxurious of all the bast fibres, and has been valued for centuries for its exceptional coolness in hot weather. It has a very specific tactile appeal; it is smooth and lustrous to both the eye and hand, and the fibre is almost silky in texture, yet embodies a springy freshness.
Linen is such a desirable commodity that other textiles in a linen-weave texture, even when made of alternative non-flax fibers are also often loosely referred to as "linen". The slubs along the length of the yarn are sometimes considered an appealing characteristic of linen, and which are often present in other bast fibres, but are in fact technically a defect that denotes a lesser quality of yarn and fabric.
All bast fibres, and particularly linen tend to have good tensile strength which increases when wet. The fibres are hygroscopic, capable of absorbing up to 20% of their weight in moisture or perspiration, which is quickly releases into the atmosphere and is therefore dry to the touch, allowing the wearer to feel cool. This is because the structure of the fibre does not lock in or trap air and does not have any insulative properties. The slight stiffness of linen prevents textiles made from it from clinging to the body, and thus dries more quickly and eliminates perspiration. It is this inherent thermo regulating aspect that encourages the body to acclimatise in hot environments.
Linen, along with the other bast fibres generally have longer staple lengths relative to cotton, which makes them lint free. The quality of the final linen yarn and fabric is dependent upon the growing conditions, harvesting methods and whether it is a short fibre, known as tow or the more desirable long line fibre.
Home Fashion :
Linen Fiber:
Linen is the most costly and luxurious of all the bast fibres, and has been valued for centuries for its exceptional coolness in hot weather. It has a very specific tactile appeal; it is smooth and lustrous to both the eye and hand, and the fibre is almost silky in texture, yet embodies a springy freshness.
Linen is such a desirable commodity that other textiles in a linen-weave texture, even when made of alternative non-flax fibers are also often loosely referred to as "linen". The slubs along the length of the yarn are sometimes considered an appealing characteristic of linen, and which are often present in other bast fibres, but are in fact technically a defect that denotes a lesser quality of yarn and fabric.
All bast fibres, and particularly linen tend to have good tensile strength which increases when wet. The fibres are hygroscopic, capable of absorbing up to 20% of their weight in moisture or perspiration, which is quickly releases into the atmosphere and is therefore dry to the touch, allowing the wearer to feel cool. This is because the structure of the fibre does not lock in or trap air and does not have any insulative properties. The slight stiffness of linen prevents textiles made from it from clinging to the body, and thus dries more quickly and eliminates perspiration. It is this inherent thermo regulating aspect that encourages the body to acclimatise in hot environments.
Linen, along with the other bast fibres generally have longer staple lengths relative to cotton, which makes them lint free. The quality of the final linen yarn and fabric is dependent upon the growing conditions, harvesting methods and whether it is a short fibre, known as tow or the more desirable long line fibre.
Linen tends to have very high
durability and its qualities improve with age and laundering. The
fibres become softer, stronger and brighter over time, enhancing its
supple ‘polished’ sheen, however it can form breaks if repeatedly
creased in the same place. Linen is also believed to have a slight anti
bacterial function, as well as a capacity for resisting humidity.
Linen is a cellulosic fibers derived from the stem of the flax plant
or a fabric made from these fibers. Linen fibers are much stronger and
more lustrous that cotton; they yield cool, absorbent fabrics that
wrinkle easily. Fabrics with linen-like texture and coolness but with
good wrinkle resistance can be produced from manufactured fibers and
blends.
Properties/Characteristics of Linen Fiber:
Linen is comfortable, good strength, twice as strong as cotton, hand-washable or dry-cleanable, crisp hand tailors, well absorbent dyes and prints, well light weight to heavy weight, no static or pilling problems, fair abrasion resistant etc. Basically there are two types of properties of linen fibers. One is physical properties and another is chemical properties.
Physical Properties of Linen:
Linen is comfortable, good strength, twice as strong as cotton, hand-washable or dry-cleanable, crisp hand tailors, well absorbent dyes and prints, well light weight to heavy weight, no static or pilling problems, fair abrasion resistant etc. Basically there are two types of properties of linen fibers. One is physical properties and another is chemical properties.
Physical Properties of Linen:
Physical properties of linen fibers are given below:
- Tensile Strength: Linen is a strong fiber. It has a tenacity of 5.5 to 6.5 gm/den. The strength is greater than cotton fiber.
- Elongation at break: Linen does not stress easily. It has an elongation at break of 2.7 to 3.5 %.
- Color: The color of linen fiber is yellowish to grey.
- Length: 18 to 30 inch in length.
- Lusture: It is brighter than cotton fiber and it is slightly silky.
- Elastic Recovery: Linen fiber has not enough elastic recovery properties like cotton fiber.
- Specific Gravity: Specific gravity of linen fiber is 1.50.
- Moisture Regain (MR %): Standard moisture regain is 10 to 12%.
- Resiliency: Very poor.
- Effect of Heat: Linen has an excellent resistance to degradation by heat. It is less affected than cotton fiber by the heat.
- Effect of Sun Light: Linen fiber is not affected by the sun light as others fiber. It has enough ability to protect sun light.
Chemical Properties of Linen:
Linen is a natural cellulosic fiber and it has some chemical properties. Chemical properties of the linen fiber are given below:
- Effect of Acids: Linen fiber is damaged by highly densified acids but low dense acids does not affect if it is wash instantly after application of acids.
- Effects of Alkalis: Linen has an excellent resistance to alkalis. It does not affected by the strong alkalis.
- Effects of Bleaching Agents: Cool chlorine and hypo-chlorine bleaching agent does not affect the linen fiber properties.
- Effect of Organic Solvent: Linen fiber has high resistance to normal cleaning solvents.
- Effect of Micro Organism: Linen fiber is attacked by fungi and bacteria. Mildews will feed on linen fabric, rotting and weakling the materials. Mildews and bacteria will flourish on linen under hot and humid condition. They can be protected by impregnation with certain types of chemicals. Copper Nepthenate is one of the chemical.
- Effects of Insects: Linen fiber does not attacked by moth-grubs or beetles.
- Dyes: It is not suitable to dye. But it can be dye by direct and vat dyes.
Major End Uses Linen Fabric:
Apparel:
Apparel:
- dresses,
- suits,
- separates,
- skirts,
- jackets,
- pants,
- blouses,
- shirts,
- children's wear etc.
- curtains,
- draperies,
- upholstery,
- bedspreads,
- table linens,
- sheets,
- dish towels etc
-
Cotton vs. Linen
Strength and Longevity
Linen is known to be the world’s strongest natural fiber. It is so durable it’s even used in paper money to increase strength! It is thicker than cotton and linen fiber has variable lengths, most of which are very long. This contributes to strength, which contributes to longevity. Linen lasts a very long time.
The strength of cotton is achieved through spinning multiple fibers into yarn and weaving the yarn into fabric.
Hand (referring to the way it feels in your hand)
From the flax plant, Linen is a bast fiber. Known to be crisper than cotton, linen becomes supple through handling. It gains elegance and softens to behold the most fluid drape. Though it is has more natural texture than cotton, it is silky with high luster.
Wrinkles? Both cotton and linen are associated with wrinkles. Linen fibers have a natural resin called lignan. At first, the fibers are stiff and crease easily. The wrinkles become smoother through handling and use.
The Cotton plant yields fluffy fiber clusters called bolls. They are very soft to the touch and resilient to handling. Cotton fabrics can be very soft and no other plant fiber can offer the same type of comfortable hand at first touch.
Interactivity with moisture
Natural fibers love water. Linen is thought of as nature’s wicking fiber. It can gain up to 20% moisture before it will first begin to feel damp. Cotton will absorb more than 25% its weight in water.
Additionally, linen is known to gain strength when wet. It has the natural ability to prevent bacterial growth. For towels, this is very important as hand and bath towels tend to be the perfect home for microbes.
The affinity of cotton and linen to moisture is one reason why natural fibers are most comfortable to wear and to have in our bedrooms. They interact well with our bodies and contribute to our comfort.
Warmth
Linen fibers are hollow, moving air and moisture naturally. During the colder months, layer linen blankets or a throw to retain heat and warmth from your body. Linen reacts to the season and the body in contact with the cloth to give the best of all circumstances. Linen is a natural insulator. It is valued for its ability to keep cool in the summer months and trap warmth in colder weather. This is all achieved through the natural properties of the fiber itself.
Cotton blankets move effortlessly between seasons. Their warmth is found in the comfort of their feel. Innovative design and texture provide places for air, adding to comfort. During cold months, use cotton blankets and throws to layer. They will add weight. In warm climates, use a cotton blanket or throw alone and it will provide rest under the perfect weight. Your blankets have one job: to keep you warm, cozy and comfortably nested. Natural plant fibers outshine.
Healthful Properties
Known to help with everything from anti-stress to a better sleep, linen is thought to have healing properties and even reduce "itis" conditions (like arthritis and dermatitis).
Ancient Egyptians used linen for its natural ability to help repel microorganisms. Linen has been known to be tolerable for those with allergies and to soothe skin conditions.
Cotton and Linen have a long History:
Linen textiles are some of the oldest in the world, dating back thousands of years. Egyptians sometimes used linen as currency.
Use of the flax plant is believed to date back to approximately 8,000 BC. Cotton use has been around since prehistoric times. Specific evidence dates back to the Neolithic era from 6500 BCE to 2500 BCE. The Cotton Industry is one of the major successes in the Industrial Revolution.
Washing Instructions
All of our cotton, linen and merino wool products can be machine-washed and tumble-dried. Our alpaca and fine micron wool products must be dry cleaned.
- Wash separately in cold water on a short, gentle cycle, with as much water as possible to allow for movement.
- Avoid harsh detergents.
- Use a liquid detergent without bleach or brighteners.
- Always pre-dilute your detergent and clear any residue bleach.
Drying Instructions Per Fabric Type
100% Cotton
- Tumble dry on delicate setting, medium to high heat.
- Do not overdry
100% Linen
- Tumble dry on delicate setting, low or no heat. Linen will become brittle if it is dried on high heat or for an extended period.
- Remove the product slightly damp from the dryer to “bake and break” the fibers. Allowing the fabric to rub on itself in a “dry” condition will cause abrasion.
- Tumbling keeps a soft drape. You can line dry, but the fabric will be stiff initially.
- Avoid exposure to direct sunlight over long periods.
50% Linen 50% Cotton
- Tumble dry on a delicate setting, low to medium heat.
- Remove promptly.
- Do not overdry.
Traditional Flax Processing. From Fibers and Seeds to Linen.
After harvest, flax stalks are allowed to dry in open air for several weeks before they undergo threshing,
or removal of seeds from the stalk by crushing open the dried seed
pods. Hand threshing is usually achieved by simply beating the dried
stalks until all the seed pods have been crushed, then shaking the seeds
free.
Flax fibers are considered bast fibers. Bast fibers are fibers collected from the phloem,
or the inner-bark of the plant. Fabrics made from these fibers are
typically quite strong and durable fabrics. Aside from linen, a few
other fabrics made from bast fibers include hemp, ramie, and rattan.
What's in a Flax Fiber?
You may remember from your Biology 101 class that the phloem is one of the two vascular structures inside of plants that carry nutrients throughout the organism (the other is the xylem,
or the woody core). Bast fibers are long, narrow supportive cells
inside the phloem that provide it with great tensile strength, but still
allow flexibility of the plant stem due to the fibers’ characteristic fiber nodes, or weak points that
are distributed randomly along the length of the fiber. These fiber
nodes are also what make linen fabric flexible without being brittle.
Separating Out the Flax Fiber
The xylem and phloem of plants are bundled together by calcium ions and a sticky protein called pectin, which must be broken down in order to separate the valuable bast fibers from the plant’s vasculature so that they can be processed and spun into yarn. This is achieved via a process called retting--or, literally, rotting. And yes, with the same awful smell!
Retting (a quick biology lesson from DeckTowel). Let's get technical.
The
malodorous process of retting can be achieved in a variety of ways, but
it typically involves prolonged exposure of the stalk to moisture.
Plants hold themselves upright by increasing water uptake into their
cells, which causes the plasma membrane to swell and increases internal
pressure against the cell wall. This pressure keeps the plant structures
stiff (Biology 101 review: Turgor pressure). Prolonged water exposure during retting eventually causes the cells of the phloem to lyse, or burst open, and allows local micro-organisms that break down the sticky pectins to invade the plant cell.
The image to the right is a cross section of a bast fiber: "X" is xylem; "P" is phloem; "C" is cortex; "BF" is bast fibers.
How do these micro-organisms break down those sticky
pectins? A man named Sergei Winogradsky figured out the answer to this
question back in the 1890s. Winogradsky, a microbiologist and soil
ecologist, is actually quite famous for this answer - his discovery of chemosynthesis - a
process wherein autotrophs (organisms that make their own food) absorb
carbon and inorganic nutrients from their surrounding environments in
order to mediate the chemical reactions with which they create their own
energy.
Prior to this discovery, scientists believed that all autotrophs were dependent upon sunlight for energy production (remember photosynthesis?).
But Winogradsky found a little bacterium living in the root nodules of
legume plants that changed everything. He identified it as Clostridium Pasteuranium, an obligate anaerobe that, by definition, cannot survive in the presence of atmospheric oxygen (O2).
The presence of this autotrophic bacterium inside of the root nodules,
without access to atmospheric oxygen and therefore also without access
to sunlight, led Winogradsky to investigate how it managed to survive.
He found that C. Pasteuranium uses water molecules to break up the sticky pectin bonds that hold the bast fibers to the phloem, a process called hydrolysis. It then uses the chemical pieces of the broken up pectins to create ammonia (NH3) out of free, bioavailable nitrogen (N2) in its surrounding environment, which can then be utilized by the bacteria in its metabolic processes. This is is called nitrogen fixation. You’ve learned about it before this biology lesson (the nitrogen cycle), and you’ve seen it with your own eyes (lightning).
Scientists have since isolated more than 22 different
kinds of autotrophic, pectin-dissolving bacteria from retted flax,
mostly belonging to the Clostridium family.
Methods of retting
-
Water retting is the most widely-employed practice and produces the highest quality fibers. It is best accomplished in stagnant or slowly-moving waters, like ponds, bogs and streams. As a rule, the more stagnant the water source, the more abundant the bacterial fauna and the faster the retting process. Flax bundles weighted down in ponds and bogs generally ret in anywhere from a few days to a couple of weeks, depending on water temperature. Because the water is stagnant and the microfauna abounds, pond or bog retting is particularly foul-smelling. Stream retting usually takes a few weeks longer, but yields cleaner (and less stinky) fibers.
-
Dew retting is the preferred method in areas where water sources are limited but that enjoy warm daytime temperatures and heavy nighttime dews. Flax stalks are spread out evenly across a grassy field, where the combination of air, sun and dew causes fermentation, which dissolves much of the stem within 2-3 weeks. Dew-retted fibers are typically of poorer quality and more darkly pigmented than natural water-retted fibers.
-
Tank retting takes place in large vats that are typically made of cement, as the acidic waste products of the bacteria corrodes metal. Stalks are first leached, or soaked, for 4-8 hours to remove dirt and pigment from the bundles. This water is then changed, and the bundles allowed to soak for 4-6 more days to complete the retting process.
-
Flax can also be retted chemically, which speeds up the process. It is, however, more harmful to both the environment and the fibers themselves, and is therefore not preferred.
Dressing the flax
The retted stalks, called straw, are dried mechanically or in natural air, and are then usually stored
for anywhere from a few weeks to months in order to allow curing to
take place. After curing, the woody stalks that still cling to the bast
fibers are further broken, usually by passing the brittle straw through
rollers that crush the wood into smaller pieces that can be more easily
removed, a process called scutching.
Scutching
involves scraping a small wooden knife down the length of the fibers as
they hang vertically, pulling the broken woody bits away from the
fiber. This is a labor-intensive process. One person scutching can
produce only about 15 pounds of flax fibers per day; less if the fibers
are coarse, hard, or have been poorly retted. The small pieces of
leftover bark that remain after scutching are called shive, and are sometimes used as a filler in thermoplastic composites.
The separated bast fibers are next heckled, or combed through a bed of nails that splits and polishes the fibers, and removes the shorter tow fibers from the mix. These tow fibers can then be spun into a coarse yarn from which low-quality linen products are made.
The longer fibers (sometimes as long as three feet!) are then ready for spinning.
Spinning
The (at long last) separated flax fibers, called stricks, are traditionally spun by hand using a distaff.
A distaff is simply a long vertical pole that attaches to a spinning
wheel from which the fibers are hung. This helps keep the fibers
organized and prevents them from turning into a tangled mess. Spinning
involves twisting together the drawn out strands of fiber to form yarns,
then winding the yarn onto a bobbin, or spool. The yarn is often
slightly dampened during spinning, which helps
prevent fly-away strands from escaping the twist and creates an
especially-smooth yarn (check out this really cool photojournal of a woman hand-spinning flax).
Flax is always spun very finely--especially the
longest of the fibers--resulting in a thin yarn. In order to create a
thicker yarn, multiple skeins of this thin yarn can be spun together, a
process called plying. You’ve probably heard
this term before in reference to your toilet paper. One ply: thin and
sufficient. Two or more ply: preferred! The resulting yarn (usually
3-ply or thereabouts) is typically finished by boiling for several hours
in soapy water, which gives it a nice shine.
Weaving
Linen yarn is generally woven
into sheets--a process wherein multiple threads are interlaced both
horizontally and vertically on a loom. Occasionally, linen yarn is also knit,
or formed into fabric by creating consecutive rows of loops that
intertwine with one another. By virtue of these loops, knit fabrics have
a degree of stretch inherent in them, and because linen yarn has no
elasticity, it is quite difficult to knit and so more frequently woven.
The Rise of the Machines
This pre-industrial method of linen production hasn’t
changed in centuries. Though over the last few hundred years we’ve
developed machines that complete the tasks of harvesting, retting and
dressing flax, these processes damage the delicate fibers such that
finest linens are still manufactured almost entirely by hand. Because
the process is still so laborious, even mechanized flax production
actually requires a great deal more handwork than other mass
industrially-produced textiles like cotton and rayon.
Wet spinning of flax yarn on cotton ring frame
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- https://vimeo.com/40402198
Courtesy :ITJ May 2012
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