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  2. Dye lot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dye_lot

    A dye lot marking from a yarn label. The dye lot is the large stamped number at top. Other information such as color code has been preprinted in smaller digits. A dye lot is a record taken during the dyeing of yarn to identify yarn that received its coloration in the same vat at the same time. Yarn manufacturers assign each lot a unique ...

  3. Heather (fabric) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heather_(fabric)

    It is typically used to mix multiple shades of grey or grey with another color to produce a muted shade (e.g., heather green), but any two colors can be mixed, including bright colors. A mixed fabric color is achieved by using different colors of fiber and mixing them together (a good example is a grey heather t-shirt).

  4. Yarn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yarn

    Yarn comes in many colors. Yarn may be used undyed, or may be coloured with natural or artificial dyes. Most yarns have a single uniform hue, but there is also a wide selection of variegated yarns: Heathered or tweed: yarn with flecks of different coloured fibre; Ombré: variegated yarn with light and dark shades of a single hue

  5. Variegated yarn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Variegated_yarn

    Yarn; Dyeing; Novelty yarns include a wide variety of yarns made with unusual features, structure or fiber composition such as slubs, inclusions, metallic or synthetic fibers, laddering and varying thickness introduced during production.

  6. Tweed - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tweed

    Traditionally used for upper-class country clothing such as shooting jackets, tweed became popular among the Edwardian middle classes who associated it with the leisurely pursuits of the elite. [6] Due to their durability tweed Norfolk jackets and plus-fours were a popular choice [ 7 ] for hunters, cyclists, golfers, and early motorists, hence ...

  7. Harris tweed - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harris_Tweed

    The original name of tweed fabric was "tweel", the Scots word for twill, as the fabric was woven in a twill weave rather than a plain (or tabby) weave.A number of theories exist as to how and why "tweel" became corrupted into "tweed"; in one, a London merchant in the 1830s, upon receiving a letter from a Hawick firm inquiring after "tweels", misinterpreted the spelling as a trade name taken ...