What was once a back breaking low paying job is done today entirely by machines but the process is still highly complex and involved.
Steps involved in making cotton clothes.
From field to fabric the process of making cotton transforms the raw fibers into threads yarn and fabric in three steps.
This lint is then collected and compressed to make bales which weigh about 500 pounds each.
The spinning process where raw cotton is turned into thread and the weaving process where the thread is woven into fabric.
From raw cotton to cotton fabrics the fabric usually used in the clothes we wear is produced through two processes.
Today most of it is still handpicked.
Also cotton was grown spun and.
Samples are taken from the bales to determine the quality of the cotton.
Most steps involved in the production of cotton have been mechanized including seeding picking ginning and baling.
Cotton fabric doesn t just spring from the ground fully formed a lot of work is involved before you ever see a bolt of it at the craft store.
The cotton gin combs the cotton fibers until only the lint is left.
The next step is the separation of the cotton fibers from the seeds and the pods in a cotton gin.
Here we will explain each process in detail using some illustrations.
Preparation spinning and weaving.
In america this process was a tedious labor intensive activity done by hand until the 19th century.
The many complex steps can be divided into three general categories preparation spinning and weaving.
The harvesting of the cotton boll can be done by hand or by mechanical means.
The manufacture of cotton cloth is a complex process involving many highly skilled workers each performing a particular critical step in the overall process.