
These are cellulose fibres that have been derived from plants.
They can be used in spinning (the skein to the right was handspun
by Susan Litton from Soybean Sliver) and papermaking (using
both the traditional technique and the silk papermaking technique),
3d embroidery techniques and feltmaking when combined with
wool fibres. They can be coloured using Fibre
Reactive Procion MX dyes.
For spinning, they need a high ratio wheel to give the twist
for the short stapled fibres and we recommend the use of a
small whorl or much treadling before allowing the yarn to
wind on to the bobbin. They can be spun directly from the
sliver or carded and rolled into a puni for traditional long
draw spinning. Joan Ruane's web site describes this process
in detail. Here is a link to her page on carding
and making a puni. The web page will open in
a separate window.
Bast fibre is collected from the inner bark (or phloem) surrounding
the stem of dicotyledonous plants (flowering plants with net-veined
leaves). The fibre has high tensile strength and is used for
yarn, rope and paper production. Examples of bast fibre include
Jute, Flax, Hemp, Soybean and Ramie.
Cotton
Sliver
The quality of cotton is found in its staple length, with
long stapled Sea Island and Egyptian as the finest, the shorter
American for m the most common and Asian cotton as the poorer
quality. It can be obtained in the raw, deseeded state or
as a combed roving ready for spinning.
The
red and green coloured cotton sliver has specially bred back
to give the original boll colours. They are rare and grown
under careful control. The colours are enhanced by boiling
yarn in an alkaline solution after spinning. The blue coloured
sliver has been dyed using indigo dye. The staple length of
these fibres is between 1-2.5cm.
Reclaim ed
Blue Jeans Fibre
A fun fibre which is a pre-consumer reclaimed fibre. It is
garnetted from denim scraps from the cutting rooms of denim
jeans sewing operations. The fibre contains bits of visible
threads to make an interesting textured yarn. It can
be added to wool fibres in feltmaking and blended to create
paper.
This paper was made with Recycled Blue Jeans fibre using
the traditional papermaking technique by Susan Cutts. Susan’s
beautiful paper sculptures can be viewed in the Gallery section
of her
website. The web page will open in a separate
window.
Bamboo
The bamboo fibre is short and fluffy, similar to raw cotton,
with lustrous, curly fibres running throughout. This derivative
of the bamboo plant will spin as cotton and cashmere and produce
a textured yarn. The cellulose fibre will give interest and
variety in papermaking and is best coloured using Fibre Reactive
Procion MX dyes.
Soybean
(Soy Silk or Soya Bean)
For the purist, this fibre should not appear on this page.
Although it is a plant fibre, it is a protein fibre and is
the residue of tofu production. Also known as Soy Silk, it
has a natural colour similar to Tussah Silk and a good sheen.
The fibre comes in sliver form with a 5.6cm staple length
and spins like silk. This ‘silk for vegans’ can
be coloured easily with Acid dyes.
To extract the fibre, the Soya bean are flaked, the oil removed
and the flakes treated with a solution of sodium sulphite
to dissolve the protein. Hydrochloric acid is added and the
protein precipitates as a curd. This is dissolved in aqueous
caustic soda and the resultant solution is aged or matured.
It is then extruded into a coagulating bath similar to that
used in casein fibre.
Tencel
(or Lyocell)
A very fine high lustre fibre derived from wood pulp which
feels similar to white silk thereby needing a little more
twist than wool when spinning. It can be blended with other
fibres to add lustre and strength.
The Tencel can be dyed using Fibre
Reactive Procion MX dyes and with Dupont
AlterEgo dyes when combined with protein fibres
for varying effects. You can find out more about this
fascinating fibre at
Lyocell.net (the page will
open in a separate window)
Flax
Tow
The best quality flax is water retted. Dew retted flax is
slightly darker in colour. Flax line is the hackled form used
on a distaff, and produces a fine smooth linen yarn. Flax
is a bast long fibre and so closely resembles hemp that a
high power microscope is needed to tell the difference.
Flax Tow is the shorter fibres left after hackling, and produces
a textured linen yarn. The short, fibres are ideal for blending
with other fibres for an effect yarn or spinning on their
own to a strong linen yarn for weaving and summer knits. The
fibres can also be used in paper making.
Browse the catalogue for: plant
fibres
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