Fibre to Fabric
Fibre to Fabric
What you'll learn
- Difference between natural and synthetic fibres.
- How cotton and jute are obtained from plants.
- How silk and wool are obtained from animals.
- How spinning converts fibre into yarn, and yarn into fabric.
Key concepts
What is a fibre?
- Fibre: thin, hair-like strands of material used to make yarn and fabric.
- Yarn: long continuous strand made by twisting fibres together.
- Fabric: cloth made by weaving or knitting yarn.
Two types of fibres:
| Type | Source | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Natural fibres | Plants or animals | Cotton, jute, silk, wool |
| Synthetic fibres | Chemical processes (petroleum) | Nylon, polyester, acrylic |
Natural fibres from plants
Cotton:
- Comes from the white fluffy seed pod (cotton boll) of the cotton plant (Gossypium sp.).
- Fibre is made of cellulose.
- Ginning: removing seeds from cotton fibres after harvesting.
- Properties: soft, absorbs sweat, comfortable in hot weather.
- Cotton grows best in warm climates with moderate rainfall — major producers: India, USA, China.
Jute:
- Obtained from the stem of the jute plant by a process called retting (soaking stems in water for 10–30 days to separate fibres by bacterial action).
- Strong, coarse, golden-brown fibre.
- Uses: sacks, ropes, bags, mats, carpet backing.
- Eco-friendly — biodegradable; grown in West Bengal (India), Bangladesh.
Natural fibres from animals
Silk (from Class 6 intro level):
- Comes from the cocoon of the silkworm (Bombyx mori).
- Silkworm spins a continuous thread around itself to form a cocoon.
- Cocoons are boiled to kill the pupa and soften the silk → thread reeled off.
- Properties: smooth, shiny, strong, lightweight.
Wool (from Class 6 intro level):
- Comes mainly from sheep's fleece (coat of wool).
- Shearing: cutting the wool from sheep (once a year; painless).
- Properties: warm, elastic, absorbs moisture without feeling wet.
From fibre to fabric — the process
| Stage | What happens |
|---|---|
| 1. Obtaining fibre | Cotton picked, jute retted, wool shorn |
| 2. Cleaning | Remove seeds (ginning for cotton), dirt |
| 3. Spinning | Twist fibres into yarn using spindle or spinning wheel (charkha) |
| 4. Weaving | Interlace yarns at right angles on a loom → fabric |
| 5. Knitting | Loop yarn repeatedly → stretchy fabric (socks, sweaters) |
Spinning:
- Spinning wheel (charkha): traditional hand-operated device to spin cotton into yarn.
- Modern spinning mills: machines spin fibre into yarn very fast.
- During spinning, fibres are drawn out (stretched) and twisted → interlocking makes yarn strong.
Synthetic fibres (brief introduction)
| Fibre | Source | Properties |
|---|---|---|
| Nylon | Coal + air + water | Strong, elastic, quick-drying |
| Polyester | Petroleum chemicals | Wrinkle-resistant, durable |
| Acrylic | Petroleum chemicals | Warm, soft; looks like wool |
- Synthetic fibres are generally stronger, cheaper, and more durable than natural fibres.
- Disadvantage: not biodegradable → cause environmental pollution.
- Melt easily when exposed to fire/heat → danger.
Comparison
| Feature | Cotton | Wool | Nylon |
|---|---|---|---|
| Source | Plant (seed pod) | Animal (sheep) | Synthetic (petroleum) |
| Absorbs moisture | Yes | Yes | No |
| Warm in winter | No | Yes | Moderate |
| Biodegradable | Yes | Yes | No |
| Comfortable | Very comfortable | Comfortable | Less comfortable |
Quick check
- What is the difference between a fibre and a fabric?
- How is cotton obtained? What is ginning?
- What is retting? Which fibre is obtained by retting?
- What is spinning? Name the traditional device used to spin cotton.
- Give two advantages and two disadvantages of synthetic fibres over natural fibres.
Open the Practice tab for graded questions on Fibre to Fabric.
3 topics • Notes • Practice • AI explanations available
1. Natural
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2. Synthetic
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3. Spinning
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