Felt Industry
The woollen felt industry has now virtually disappeared but it was once a flourishing and energetic trade that exploded onto the textile scene in 1840. This book records the history personalities and impact of the British industry in the hope that felt can continue to re-establish itself as an eco-friendly material suitable for the modern age.
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Textiles of South-East Asia
South East Asia covers a vast area that includes the northern mountain terrain of the 'Golden Triangle' - the tropical forests, plains and rivers of Thailand, Laos and Myanmar, the rice paddies of Vietnam and Cambodia, and the historic Spice Islands of Malaysia, Indonesia and the Philippines. This book deals with textiles of this region.
Sugar Industry and Cotton Crops
Discusses the global sugar market; the application of nano - and ultrafiltration in the sugar industry, and sugar utilisation by fungi providing leads for fungal metabolic engineering in crude plant substrates in industrial applications. This book also discusses cotton crops, the most popularly used textile fibre in the world.
'Cloth Dresers', 1814
Hand-coloured aquatint by Robert Havell after George Walker from 'The Costume of Yorkshire' by George Walker, published 1814 by Robinson & Son of Leeds. The image shows a textile worker cropping or trimming woollen cloth with shears, after combing it with teasels to raise the nap. Damp cloth is laid on a shear board, and presure increased by placing heart-shaped weights on the flat surface. 'The Costume of Yorkshire' recorded the social customs, pastimes and occupations of the people of Yorkshire at the beginning of the Industrial Revolution. It contained 40 aquatints together with more than 100 pages of text describing the scenes in both English and French. Its author, George Walker (1781-1856), was commisioned to produce the book by a local bookseller.