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Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Care linen instruction

Washing Table Linens

Table linens should be washed in warm water and gentle detergent, with a final cold rinse.
Fabric softeners are not recommended, since they decrease absorbency and impart a fragrance that can be disconcerting.
Remove table linens promptly from the wash, and shake out to help minimize wrinkles before drying.
Always follow the washing instructions given on the care label of the article.

Saturday, April 16, 2011

Textiles recycling

* Cotton Recycling
* Wool Recycling
* Burlap, Jute and Sisal Recycling
* Polyurethane Foam Recycling
* Polyester and Polyester Fiber Recycling
* Nylon and Nylon Fiber Recycling
* Other Synthetic Fiber Recycling
* Carpet Recycling
* Rags and Wipers
* Used and Recycled Bags
* Used Clothing
* Used Footwear
* Leather Recycling
* Textile Recycling Employment

Textile recycling

Textile recycling
Textile recycling is the method of reusing or reprocessing used clothing, fibrous material and clothing scraps from the manufacturing process. Textiles in municipal solid waste are found mainly in discarded clothing, although other sources include furniture, carpets, tires, footwear, and nondurable goods such as sheets and towels.

Sunday, March 27, 2011

4 point system inspection (Four point inspection fabric)

Inspection Procedure:4 point system
· Determine the amount to inspect 10%).
· Select the rolls to inspect.
· Put the rolls on the inspection machine or other viewing device.
· Cut off a 6 inch piece across the width off the end of the roll. Mark the right and left side of the strip. Stop the inspection process every 50 yards and use the strip to check for any shading problems. Also make sure to check the end of the role.
· Inspect for visual defects with the light on at a speed slow enough to find the defects. (The fabric must be checked at a slow rate in order to effectively find flaws). Sometimes you may have to turn the light off to see how a flaw will affect the appearance of a garment.
· Check that the roll contains the correct yardage as stated by the piece goods source.
· Check for skewed, biased, and bowed fabric.
· Mark any defects to the side with colored tape so that they can be easily found and noted.
· Record any defects.

Four point system fabric inspection

Size Defect Penalty .
3 inches or less: 1 Point
Over 3 inches, but less than 6: 2 Points
Over 6 inches, but less than 9: 3 Points
Over 9 inches: 4 Points
The length of the defect is used to determine the penalty point. Only major defects are considered. No penalty points are assigned to minor defects. (A major defect is any defect that would cause a final garment to be considered a second.)
Major Defects:
· Major woven fabric defects include but are not limited to slubs, holes, missing yarns, yarn variation, end out, soiled yarns, and wrong yarn.
· Major dye or printing defects are out of register, dye spots, machine stop, color out, color smear, or shading.
Acceptance Criteria and Calculation:
· 40 points per 100 yards is the acceptable defect rate
· # of Points per 100 yds = # of penalty points x 100 Yds inspected

inspection fabric textile(4 point system)

Fabric Quality Inspection:
The quality of a final garment depends on the quality of a fabric when it is received as a roll. Even the most outstanding manufacturing methods cannot compensate for defective materials. Normally, we inspect 10% of the rolls we receive and evaluate them based on a four-point system. This way, we can avoid fabric related quality problems before it is put into production
Four- Point System:
Amount to select: Inspect at least 10% of the total rolls of the shipment.
Selection of rolls: Select at least one roll of each color. If more than one role must be selected, then choose the additional roles in proportion to the total number of roles per color received.
Defect Classification (Four- Point System)

Saturday, March 12, 2011

Innovation cotton textile

Innovation cotton textile
Cotton is used to make a number of textile products. These include terrycloth for highly absorbent bath towels and robes; denim for blue jeans; chambray, popularly used in the manufacture of blue work shirts (from which we get the term "blue-collar"); and corduroy, seersucker, and cotton twill. Socks, underwear, and most T-shirts are made from cotton. Bed sheets often are made from cotton. Cotton also is used to make yarn used in crochet and knitting. Fabric also can be made from recycled or recovered cotton that otherwise would be thrown away during the spinning, weaving, or cutting process. While many fabrics are made completely of cotton, some materials blend cotton with other fibers, including rayon and synthetic fibers such as polyester. It can either be used in knitted or woven fabrics, as it can be blended with elastine to make a stretchier thread for knitted fabrics, and apparel such as stretch jeans.

Sunday, February 27, 2011

Inspection fabric system

Inspection fabric system

Inspection fabric system

Fabric inspection 4 point 10 point

Fabric inspection 4 point 10 point

Fabric inspection 4 point 10 point

Care symbol download

Care symbol download

Care symbol download

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Inspection machine

inspection machine

inspection machine

Textile testing procedure

Fabric testing

fabric testing

Fabric inspection Machine

Fabric inspection Machine

Fabric inspection Machine

Saturday, February 12, 2011

Machine inspection

machine inspection


machine inspection

Monday, January 31, 2011

Quality control procedure

Specific quality control procedures come from the type of good a company produces and the processes used in production. For example, job order costing tracks the use of direct materials and labor for each job or individual project produced. Analytical quality control procedures can be harder to implement for these manufacturers, as each project is slightly different. Rather than comparing the project to historical guidelines, quality control managers will often take an analytical approach to measure the project against the company’s production standards offered to clients

Analytical Quality Control

Analytical quality control procedures are statistical measurements that a company implements to determine how well it consistently produces goods. Manufacturers use these procedures to ensure their quality matches both customer expectations and the current standard of goods sold on the market. Analytical quality control procedures require companies to take a sample from a larger population of goods, apply a regimen of tests, tweak production procedures to correct problems, and train employees accordingly.

Quality control standard

In addition to stitch inspection, garment quality control also involves setting aside soiled items and searching for human error. They generally check garments to make sure they have been properly labeled by size and color. In addition, they inspect seams to be sure machine operators properly aligned each piece before sewing. When inspecting shorts or pants, they usually check to be sure each leg is of the same length.

AQL inspection

Garment construction usually involves the use of several different types of sewing machines, and garment inspectors carefully inspect machine stitching. Some of those machines are over lock machines, straight stitch machines, and bar tack machines. Over lock machines, also referred to as sergers, usually use more than one needle to produce a seam that does not have a raw edge. These machines are used to produce stronger seams that will not ravel after laundering and wear. Bar tack machines are usually used to provide reinforcement to areas of extreme stress and in the attachment of belt loops.

Garment qualtiy control

Most clothing manufacturers do not require that their garment quality control inspectors have higher education. They may, however, require these inspectors to undergo training prior to beginning their jobs. Quality inspectors in clothing manufacturing often do much more than simply inspect the garments. In many cases, they are required to clip hanging strings and fold and sort the garments so they are ready for packaging and shipment.

Quality control

Most all forms of garment quality control involve sight and stress inspection. Quality inspectors look over individual items in an effort to spot defects in fabric and workmanship. In addition, these inspectors may pull at seams to determine if the strength of the seam is adequate to accept stress. Seams that must be able to accept the stress of body movement include seat seams, inseams and seams at sleeve openings. These are the areas where the body most often moves, so these seams must be especially strong.