- A
rope is a
group of
yarns, plies, fibres, or
strands that are
twisted or
braided together into a
larger and
stronger form.
Ropes have
tensile strength...
-
Yarn is a long
continuous length of
interlocked fibres, used in sewing, crocheting, knitting, weaving, embroidery, ropemaking, and the
production of textiles...
-
plaiting technique called sennit to
create the
soles and
straps out of
rope yarn and canvas,
materials which were
readily available on
sailing ships. This...
- to a Sunday, and,
because the crew used
rope yarn for mending,
Wednesday afternoon became known as
rope yarn Sunday. 2. After
uniforms began to require...
- ship or boat
Rope,
yarns,
plies or
strands twisted or
braided together into a
larger form
String (disambiguation) Cord (disambiguation)
Rope (disambiguation)...
- feed
continuous yarns in and out of dye vats. In
rope dyeing,
continuous yarns are
gathered together into long
ropes or
groups of
yarns –
after these bundles...
-
Textile fibers, threads,
yarns and
fabrics are
measured in a
multiplicity of units. A fiber, a
single filament of
natural material, such as cotton, linen...
- cord when
referring to type-III paracord) is a
lightweight nylon kernmantle rope originally used in the
suspension lines of parachutes. This cord is now used...
-
occasions practised, to make each man
carry about him a garter, or
piece of
rope yarn, in
order to bind up a limb in case of
profuse bleeding. If it be objected...
- strips. 4. The
paper strips are then spun into
yarn. 1. The
natural white yarn is then
coloured using the
yarn dyeing method which is more
sustainable than...