The 'Textile industry' (also known in the
United Kingdom and
Australia as the 'Rag Trade') is a term used for industries primarily concerned with the design or manufacture of
clothing as well as the distribution and use of
textiles .
Cottage stage
Before the maufacturing processes were mechanized, textiles were produced in the home, and excess sold for extra money. Most cloth was made from either
wool,
cotton, or
flax, depending on the era and location. For example, during the late
mediaeval period,
cotton became known as an
imported fibre in northern
Europe, without any knowledge of what it came from other than that it was a
plant; noting its similarities to wool, people in the region could only imagine that cotton must be produced by plant-borne sheep.
John Mandeville, writing in
1350, stated as fact the now-preposterous belief: "There grew there [India] a wonderful tree which bore tiny lambs on the endes of its branches. These branches were so pliable that they bent down to allow the lambs to feed when they are hungrie." This aspect is retained in the name for cotton in many European languages, such as
German ''Baumwolle'', which translates as "tree wool". By the end of the 16th century, cotton was cultivated throughout the warmer regions in
Asia and the
Americas. In Roman times, wool, linen and leather clothed the European population: the cotton of India was a curiosity that only naturalists had heard of, and silk, imported along the
Silk Road from China, was an extravagant luxury. The use of
flax fibre in the manufacturing of cloth in northern Europe dates back to Neolithic times.
Cloth was produced in the home, and the excess woven cloth was sold to merchants called
clothiers who visited the village with their trains of pack-horses. Some of the cloth was made into clothes for people living in the same area and a large amount of cloth was exported.
The process of making cloth depends slightly on the fiber being used, but there are three main steps: preparation of fibers for
spinning, spinning, and
weaving or
knitting. The preparation of the fibers differs the most depending on the fiber used. Flax requires
retting and dressing, while wool requires carding and washing. The spinning and weaving processes are very similar between fibers though.
Spinning evolved from twisting the fibers by hand, to use of a
drop spindle, to a
spinning wheel. Spindles or parts of them have been found in very, very old archaeological sites; they may represent one of the earliest pieces of technology available to humankind. was invented in
India between 500 and 1000 A.D.
[Cotton: Origin, History, Technology, and Production By C. Wayne Smith, Joe Tom Cothren. Page viii. Published 1999. John Wiley and Sons. Technology & Industrial Arts. 864 pages. ISBN 0471180459] It reached
Europe via the
Middle East in the
European Middle Ages.
Weaving, done on a
loom has been around for as long as spinning. There are some indications that weaving was already known in the
Palaeolithic. An indistinct textile impression has been found at
Pavlov, Moravia.
Neolithic textiles are well known from finds in
pile dwellings in Switzerland. One extant fragment from the
Neolithic was found in
Fayum at a site which dates to about
5000 BCE. There are many different types of looms, from a simple inkle loom that dates back to the Vikings, to the standard floor loom.
History during the industrial revolution
Main articles: Textile manufacture during the Industrial Revolution
The key British industry at the beginning of the 18th century was the production of
textiles made with
wool from the large
sheep-farming areas in the
Midlands and across the country (created as a result of land-clearance and
inclosure).
Handlooms and
spinning wheels were the tools of the trade of the
weavers in their cottages, and this was a labour-intensive activity providing
employment throughout Britain, with major centres being the West Country;
Norwich and environs; and the
West Riding of Yorkshire. The
export trade in woolen goods accounted for more than a quarter of British exports during most of the 18th century, doubling between 1701 and 1770
[1]. Exports of the
cotton industry – centred in
Lancashire – had grown tenfold during this time, but still accounted for only a tenth of the value of the woollen trade.
The textile industry grew out of the
industrial revolution in the
18th Century as
mass production of clothing became a mainstream industry. Starting with the
flying shuttle in
1733 inventions were made to speed up the manufacturing process. In
1738 Lewis Paul and
John Wyatt patented the
Roller Spinning machine and the
flyer-and-bobbin system. Lewis Paul invented a
carding machine in 1748, and by 1764 the
spinning jenny had also been invented. In
1771,
Richard Arkwright used waterwheels to power looms for the production of cotton cloth, his invention becoming known as the
water frame. In
1784,
Edmund Cartwright invented the
power loom. With the spinning and weaving process now mechanized,
cotton mills cropped up all over Great Britain.
Textile mills originally got their power from
water wheels, and thus had to be situated along a river. With the invention of the
steam engine, in the 1760s to 1800's, mills no longer needed to be along rivers.
Post industrial revolution
Many of the cotton mills, like the one in Lowell MA, in the US originally started with the intention of hiring local farm girls for a few years. The mill job was designed to give them a bit more money before they went back to the farm life. With the inflow of cheap labor from Ireland during the potato famine, the setup changed, as the girls became easily replaceable. Cotton mills were full of the loud clanking of the looms, as well as lint and cotton fiber. When the mills were first built a worker would work anywhere from one to four looms. As the design for the loom improved so that it stopped itself whenever a thread broke, and automatically refilled the shuttle, the number of machines a worker could work increased to up to 50.
Originally, power looms were shuttle-operated but in the early part of the 20th century the faster and more efficient shuttleless loom came into use. Today, advances in technology have produced a variety of looms designed to maximize production for specific types of material. The most common of these are air-jet looms and water-jet looms. Industrial looms can weave at speeds of six rows per second and faster.
By the latter
20th Century, the industry in the
developed world had developed a bad reputation, often involving
immigrants in illegal "
sweat shops" full of people working on
textile manufacturing and
sewing machines being paid less than minimum wages. This trend has resulted due to attempts to protect existing industries which are being challenged by
developing countries in
South East Asia, the
Indian subcontinent and more recently,
Central America. Whilst
globalisation has seen the manufacturing outsourced to overseas labor markets, there has been a trend for the areas historically associated with the trade to shift focus to the more
white collar associated industries of
fashion design,
fashion modeling and retail.
Areas historically involved heavily in the "rag trade" include
London and
Milan in
Europe,
SoHo district in
New York City and the
Flinders Lane and
Richmond districts in
Melbourne and
Surry Hills in
Sydney.
In popular culture
★
The Rag Trade, a British sitcom
See also
★
Textile manufacturing terminology
★
Rags to riches
External links
★
History of the Textile industry
★
union of textile industries