FASH 15 textiles dyeing & printing. color is one of the most significant factors in the appeal &...
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Transcript of FASH 15 textiles dyeing & printing. color is one of the most significant factors in the appeal &...
dyeing & printing
color is one of the most significant factors in the appeal & marketability of textile products
manner in which color is added to a textile and the chemical nature of the colorant contribute to product’s•appearance•performance•rate of response to fashion change•quality•cost
color theory
complex phenomenon that combines •the physics of light•chemistry of colored objects•biology of the eye•behavioral sciences—social & cultural meaning of color
•aesthetics
colorants—pigments
insoluble color particles held on surface of a fabric by a binding agent
•application is quick, simple & economical•more than 80% of printed fabrics colored with pigments•fewer sustainability issues compared to dyes•lower color strength—uses more pigment•washdown can be a problem (losing color)•used on short-run prints such as university logos, professional sports teams, event t-shirts, etc…
colorants—dyes
complex organic compounds used to add color to materials by binding to them
•molecules dissolved in in water or some other carrier that allows them to penetrate the fiber—stage added affects penetration•chemical additives used to regulate penetration•great color strength•small amount of dye colors large quantities of fabric•used in either solutions or pastes (used for printing)•thermoplastic fibers difficult to dye
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SBN3hDIz88Y
stages of dyeing
fiber stage—•added to fibers before yarn spinning—slightly irregular color (heathered or mottled)•mass pigmentation (solution-dyed)—adding colored pigments or dyes to spinning solution before fiber is formed•stock or fiber dyeing is expensive
stages of dyeing
yarn stage—can be done with • yarn in skeins— skein dyeing• yarns wrapped on cones or packages—
package dyeing• yarn wound on beams— beam dyeing
yarn-dyed fabrics more expensive to produce—• larger inventories of yarn needed• threading loom
considered to be better quality fabrics
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_wfagh_MZRw&feature=related
participation activity:yarn dyeing wool & kapok samples
…using the wool & kapok samples created in the yarn spinning activity from a previous class, select a color of kool-aid dye to experiment with…put both samples in the same color for comparison purposes…leave in dye for duration of class
stages of dyeing
piece/fabric stagepiece dyeing—when bolt or roll of fabric dyed • usually produces solid-color fabrics• generally costs less to dye• color decisions can be delayed
cross dyeing—piece dyeing of fabrics (sometimes yarns) made of different generic fibers• each fiber type bonds with a different dye class
union dyeing—another type of piece dyeing that uses dyes suited to each fiber type, mixed to produce same hue
stages of dyeing
product stage—after fabric is cut & sewn into finished product
• great care must be taken in handling materials & dyeing to produce level, uniform color
• button, thread, trim may be different color because of differences in dye absorption
• important due to quick response to retail & consumer demands
methods of dyeing
batch dyeing—AKA exhaust dyeing—textile circulated through dye bath, can be used in any stage of production
beck (reel or winch) dyeing—•fabric (in loose rope) lifted in and out of dye bath by a reeljig dyeing—•uses stationary dye bath with two rolls above bath—fabric carried around rolls & rolled back and forthpad dyeing—•fabric run through dye bath in open width then between squeeze rollers to force dye into fabric with pressure
methods of dyeing
package dyeing—dye bath forced through textile during yarn stage—wound on core and placed on perforated spindle in pressurized machine
methods of dyeing
combination dyeing—both textile & dye bath are circulated
jet dyeing—•similar to beck dyeing—fabric processed as continuous looppaddle machines, rotary drums or tumblers—•used primarily for product dyeingcontinuous machines—•used for large fabric lots—include compartments for wetting-out, dyeing, after-treatment, washing, rinsing
methods of dyeing
resist dyeing—block color absorption during yarn or fabric dyeing
batik—•generally hand process using hot wax applied to fabric in given designtie dye—•hand process in which areas of yarn or fabric are wrapped with thread or stringikat—•ancient form of resist in which yarn is tied, dyed & woven—requires great skill to determine placement of design in finished fabric
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KkFc0JNsmO0
printing
•used to add color to localized areas only•allows for greater design flexibility and relatively inexpensive patterned fabric•wet prints use a thick, liquid paste•dry prints use a powder•foam prints use a colorant dispersed in foam
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6iVicNDx-00&feature=related
printing methods
direct printing—color is applied directly to fabric in pattern & location desired in finished fabric
block printing—•hand process; oldest technique—expensive & slowwarp printing—•warp yarn printed before weaving
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LZ4_0shRurE
printing methods
discharge printing—•piece-dyed fabrics in which design is made by removing color from selected fabric areas•usually done on dark backgrounds
screen printing•incredibly versatile, simple process•separate mesh screens used for each color
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=91Y59-gSBi8&NR=1&feature=fvwp
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NQpmFFarsZA&feature=related
printing methods
digital printing—•ink-jet printing
heat-transfer printing•design transferred to fabric from specially printed paper by heat & pressure
electrostatic printing•prepared screen covered with powdered dye; passes through electric field & pulled onto material
foil printing•adhesive applied to fabric, foil heated on heat transfer press & bonds to adhesive pattern
stencil printing•separate pattern cut for each color, color is applied in thick paste or sprayed on with air gun
participation activity:yarn dyeing wool & kapok samples
…remove your yarn samples from the dye—please be careful not to spill or dribble dye, clean up after yourself…rinse and wring out yarn samples well…compare the two samples and answer the following questions:• how well did the wool take the dye?• how well did the kapok take the dye?• what differences between the two samples are readily
identifiable?• which one do you like better?• anything else you would like to add?
…lay out samples to dry in resource room—I will collect & grade them later