06 September 2021

Textile Production

Let's look at the well-preserved textile production.
 
Here was the production of fabrics from polyester, acetate, polyamide, and cotton fibers. 

The fabric production process can be divided into three main stages: spinning, weaving, and finishing. The first stage is handled by spinning mills or synthetic fiber plants, which send spools of finished yarn to weaving mills and mills. The yarns, ready to begin production, are placed on the reels on the header picture frames.
The yarns are unwound, guided into individual channels, and sent to the weaving looms.
The weaving looms, thread storage and preparation are, for some unknown reason, in a part of the shop that has no light windows. Therefore, I limited myself to just a few pictures.
A huge space with a field of looms. The flashlight can't reach the end.
The next stage is called finishing. Here arrives the already woven fabric. It is treated with different solutions which increase the mechanical properties and the dyeing ability. The solution composition varies depending on the fibers used.
In these horizontal barrels, the fabrics are boiled off.
Those tanks with hinged lids are for the mercerization process. The treatment of the stretched cotton fabric with an alkali solution.
Fabric greenhouses.
Dead flesh is climbing out of the tanks.
Modernization has not saved the factory, and now the shiny stainless steel tanks contrast against the decay.
Those tanks are very nice.
Color faded.
Dyes storage.
Machines for patterning fabric.
Stop decay.
Product warehouse and rifling tables.
Laboratory.
Gorgeously molded warehouse.
Mold-infested offices.
That's all.
Until we meet again!

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