Plush Fabric For Baby Blanket (ROUROUROU) are characterised by the tufts or loops of fibres or yarns that stand up from the base fabric. Pile fabrics exist in many forms such as velvet, terry towel, chenille and perhaps most commonly, pile carpets. They can be made by numerous processes including tufting, knitting, knotting, flocking and nonwovens. Velvet fabrics are believed to have existed as early as 2000 BC. The most common type of velvet is a cut pile woven fabric used widely in apparel and home furnishing applications. The pile is produced by the extra set of warp yarns used during weaving.
There are several production methods. One method is wire weaving by inserting wires in the shed formed by the warp yarns for the pile. The pile warp forms yarn loops on the fabric surface after the wires are withdrawn. The pile may be left as loop pile or cut to make cut pile. In terry fabrics, loops are formed on both sides of the fabric. Another method of producing pile fabrics is face-to-face weaving in which a double fabric, one on top of the other, is made with vertical links provided by the extra set of warp yarns. The linking warp yarn is then cut to produce velvet piles. This is illustrated only cut pile fabrics can be made this way. It is also possible to produce pile effects through knitting or even from nonwoven fabrics. An example of a knitted double fabric.
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