Many
of the towels, sheets, shirts and clothing we enjoy using and wearing are made
of cotton. The cotton plant at harvest
time looks like it has a cluster of flurry snowballs made of silky white cotton
fibers.
After
the cotton has been picked it is carried to a machine called a “gin” which
separates the fibers from the seeds.
When
the cotton arrives at the textile mill, spinning machines spin and twin the
loose fibers into strong threads and wind them on bobbins for weaving.
After
the thread has been spun, a machine called a “loom” automatically weaves
hundreds of threads into cloth in much the same way we might weave a reed
basket.
After
the cloth has been woven it goes through many other steps in which it is
bleached, dyed, and printed.
Chemicals
are added to printed cloth to make sure that the colors remain bright. – Dick Rogers
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