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  Features : Textile : Textile Trends
 
Untitled Document
Linen Yarns for Quality Fabric
...Identifying the Perfect Yarn
 
Linen a natural fibre with its high moisture absorbent property is not only a preferred fabric for international customers, but has now become a preferred choice of Indians. The growing demand of Linen Fabrics has resulted into a sharp growth in last three years in allocation of weaving capacities by fabric manufacturers in India. Manish Mehta, Executive Director with Texperts India, Mumbai, a Textile Graduate with an experience of around twenty-five years in the textile industry, shares some practical tips on selecting the right yarn for weaving of linen fabric. Texperts represents Kingdom Holding Company, in India which is having an installed capacity of 75,000 wet spinning spindles producing 13,000 MT/annum of pure linen wet spun yarns.
 
The spinning unit of Kingdom Holding in China one of the biggest manufacturers of fine quality linen yarns in the world
 
Linen yarns have the typical characteristic of thick, thin, slubs and knots which are a result of the vast difference in the natural length of the fibres. While long fibre strands are processed through various steps to spin the fine quality linen yarns from 5Lea (3Nm) to 150Lea( 90Nm); short fibres are also processed separately through the same process to spin counts like 5Lea to 46Lea. While long fibres make the body of the yarn, short fibres make the slubs and knots. The imperfection of the long and short fibre creating knots and slubs in weaving have been used by the designers to give the garment a natural and unique look.

Also, due to poor elasticity of the flax fibres, the linen fabric made out of it has very poor crease resistance, but the creases or wrinkles add to the beauty of the linen garments due to the increase in the reflection surface of the garment to mirror the natural glaze of the fabric. In fact, linen fabrics woven or knitted out of linen yarns have a typical sheen, crisp and textured feel which can range from stiff and rough to soft and smooth handle.

With the ability to absorb up to 20 per cent wt/wt of moisture without giving a damp feeling, linen has multiple end uses ranging from fine high-end apparels, home textiles, fine professional painting surfaces to ideal substrates for laminating with different functional membranes for various end uses.
 
Informed Selection of Yarn for better realisation at fabric stage
To ensure loom efficiency and better fabric presentation it is important to keep some critical indicators in mind when comparing linen yarns from different suppliers. Judging the different quality of linen yarn having the same specifications like count and long or short length fibre can be done by a simple test for checking the breaking force of yarn per kilometre (RKM). The higher the RKM, the better is the yarn quality, as even after yarn dyeing the yarn shall have sufficient strength for efficiently weaving the fabric. Also higher the elongation, better will be the loom efficiency of the yarn; and lower the imperfections, better will be the fabric appearance and colour brightness.

But even in absence of proper quality test facilities of two different yarns of same specifications, some simple steps can help to give an idea about the comparative performance of the yarns on the loom. Firstly, yarns with better shine are of better quality. As a simple visual test wind the yarns on different black boards and compare; lower the imperfections better will be the board appearance, and the yarn with cleaner board appearance will give lower breakages on loom and better fabric appearance. Another simple test to determine strength is to break the yarns by hand and
 
Yarns by Kingdom Holding
 
hold the yarn end in left hand and stretch the length of about one metre by right hand. Higher the cracking sound at the time of break, better is the RKM. Similarly, higher the extension of length before break, the better is the elongation. For example a yarn of 24Nm (40 Lea) short fibre with 23 RKM and 1.8 per cent elongation (Uster Iensorapid) shall result in lower breakages on loom than a corresponding yarn of 24 RKM and 1.6 per cent elongation.

Linen yarns have a moisture regain of 12 per cent hence the yarns are sold on a conditioned weight at 12 per cent even if the moisture content in the yarn at packing is lower. The weight shortage in linen yarns is a general compliant from weavers/ knitters but it is just notional.

The yarn even if conditioned to 12 per cent before packing tends to lose moisture in transit/ stock, but the length of the yarn remains the same as it was at the time of packing at 12 per cent moisture and the yarn/fabric again gains the moisture from atmosphere up to its moisture regain of 12 per cent.

Linen fabrics are expensive textiles and only the price of linen yarns should not be a consideration when buying yarn as a lot of value addition goes into yarn dyeing, weaving, and fabric finishing and mending before the fabric is ready for sale. A yarn with lower imperfections, better glaze, higher RKM coupled with better elongation though purchased at 5 per cent higher price than the yarn of same specifications with higher imperfections, poorer glaze, lower RKM/Elongation, etc. shall realize better value out of fabric in absolute terms.
 
 
 
 
 
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