[Northkeep] Identifying fabrics (was: linen-rayon blends...?)
Betsy Marshall
betsy at softwareinnovation.com
Tue Oct 19 06:37:54 PDT 2004
There is also the bleach test- put a small scrap- about thumbnail size
in bleach over night- any wool or silk (protein fibers) will dissolve,
any synthetic or bast (cotton, linen) fibers will remain- great for
checking to see if your wool is a blend or 100%.
HTH, Pyro
-----Original Message-----
From: northkeep-bounces+betsy=softwareinnovation.com at ansteorra.org
[mailto:northkeep-bounces+betsy=softwareinnovation.com at ansteorra.org] On
Behalf Of Anawyn at aol.com
Sent: Monday, October 18, 2004 12:00 PM
To: northkeep at ansteorra.org
Subject: Re: [Northkeep] Identifying fabrics (was: linen-rayon
blends...?)
Talana would be the better one to answer this. Hopefully she will see
this
post and add her wisdom to it. I know that one of the ways you can tell
synthetic is with a "burn test." Take a small bit of the fabric and
light it with a
match. If the charred remains looks like a clump that melted together
(like
melted plastic), it is a pretty sure bet you have a synthetic. Natural
fibers
will not react that way, they will simply char and turn to ash. Another
is a
"crush" test, grab a palmful of fabric and squeeze it, if it wrinkles it
is most
likely, at least in large part, a natural fiber. If it does not wrinkle
at all,
most likely it is synthetic. Now that is not an absolute, some natural
fibers
spring back well, and I have known some synthetic to wrinkle, but it is
a
good general rule of thumb.
Hope that helps!
Anawyn
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