The Chemistry of Hat Manufacturing eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 158 pages of information about The Chemistry of Hat Manufacturing.

The Chemistry of Hat Manufacturing eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 158 pages of information about The Chemistry of Hat Manufacturing.

TEXTILE FIBRES, PRINCIPALLY WOOL, FUR, AND HAIR

Vegetable Fibres.—­Textile fibres may be broadly distinguished as vegetable and animal fibres.  It is absolutely necessary, in order to obtain a useful knowledge of the peculiarities and properties of animal fibres generally, or even specially, that we should be, at least to some extent, familiar with those of the vegetable fibres.  I shall therefore have, in the first place, something to tell you of certain principal vegetable fibres before we commence the more special study of the animal fibres most interesting to you as hat manufacturers, namely, wool, fur, and hair.  What cotton is as a vegetable product I shall not in detail describe, but I will refer you to the interesting and complete work of Dr. Bowman, On the Structure of the Cotton Fibre.  Suffice it to say that in certain plants and trees the seeds or fruit are surrounded, in the pods in which they develop, with a downy substance, and that the cotton shrub belongs to this class of plants.  A fibre picked out from the mass of the downy substance referred to, and examined under the microscope, is found to be a spirally twisted band; or better, an irregular, more or less flattened and twisted tube (see Fig. 1).  We know it is a tube, because on taking a thin, narrow slice across a fibre and examining the slice under the microscope, we can see the hole or perforation up the centre, forming the axis of the tube (see Fig. 2).  Mr. H. de Mosenthal, in an extremely interesting and valuable paper (see J.S.C.I.,[1] 1904, vol. xxiii. p. 292), has recently shown that the cuticle of the cotton fibre is extremely porous, having, in addition to pores, what appear to be minute stomata, the latter being frequently arranged in oblique rows, as if they led into oblique lateral channels.  A cotton fibre varies from 2.5 to 6 centimetres in length, and in breadth from 0.017 to 0.05 millimetre.  The characteristics mentioned make it very easy to distinguish cotton from other vegetable or animal fibres.  For example, another vegetable fibre is flax, or linen, and this has a very different appearance under the microscope (see Fig. 3).  It has a bamboo-like, or jointed appearance; its tubes are not flattened, nor are they twisted.  Flax belongs to a class called the bast fibres, a name given to certain fibres obtained from the inner bark of different plants.  Jute also is a bast fibre.  The finer qualities of it look like flax, but, as we shall see, it is not chemically identical with cotton, as linen or flax is.  Another vegetable fibre, termed “cotton-silk,” from its beautiful, lustrous, silky appearance, has excited some attention, because it grows freely in the German colony called the Camaroons, and also on the Gold Coast.  This fibre, under the microscope, differs entirely in appearance from both cotton and flax fibres.  Its fibres resemble straight and thin, smooth, transparent, almost

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The Chemistry of Hat Manufacturing from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.