BSc APPAREL AND FASHION TECHNOLOGY (MINIMUM CREDITS TO BE EARNED: 158) |Code No. |Course |Hours / Week | |Maximum Marks | | | | | | | | | | |Credits |
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SMART CLOTHES – “Clothes of the future” With this new time and age of technological advancements‚ the manufacturing of smart clothes has brought about a textile revolution. This involves the integration of electronic components and Nano-technology within fabrics and fibres resulting in the birth of intelligent fabrics possessing specific properties. Smart materials are capable of ‘thinking’ and ‘acting’ by sensing the conditions of the immediate environment. These are sensitive to the wearer’s body
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Textiles are made up from natural or man-made fibres or a combination of both. “Fibres are thin‚ hair-like structures” (Blair‚ n.d: online) that are categorized into two types: long filament fibres and short staple fibres. Natural fibres are usually staple‚ whilst man-made fibres are filament‚ with the exception of silk that comes from a natural source. These raw fibres are spun to produce a long‚ continuous thread referred to as yarn‚ which is then used in a series of methods that include‚ stitching
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FIBRES FOR TECHNICAL TEXTILES 1 INTRODUCTION Human life is surrounded by hundreds of textile fibres either in the form of clothes‚ interior textiles or in the form of high performance technical textiles made of conventional or high technology fibres for various applications. A textile fibre is usually defined as a flexible‚ macroscopically homogenous cylindrical body mainly with circular cross- section having a high ratio of length to diameter (typically 100-3000: 1). Textile fibres are derived
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some other problems which are associated with this sector. Those are- lack of marketing tactics‚ absence of easily on-hand middle management‚ a small number of manufacturing methods‚ lack of training organizations for industrial workers‚ supervisors and managers‚ autocratic approach of nearly all the investors‚ fewer process units for textiles and garments‚ sluggish backward or forward blending procedure‚ incompetent ports‚ entry/exit complicated and loading/unloading takes much time‚ time- consuming
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the Pakistani Textile industry. The threat of substitutes is high‚ the bargaining power of buyers is high‚ the bargaining power of seller is low because there are many of them‚ the threat of new entrants is high because it is easy to set up a textile mill. So the competitive rivalry in the industry is high because the set up cost is low and there are a number of substitutes available to the customers. http://www.slideshare.net/vipinclear/textile-industry The Indian textile industry is one
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Fashion Accessories Industry In India Market Research 2009 ch on Textile Apparels & Clothing _____________________________________________________________________ ______________ Mar Market Research on Accessories Sector in India Prepared for Italian Trade Commission‚ Trade Promotion Section of the Consulate General of Italy Mumbai By Table of ACE GLOBAL PRIVATE LIMITED NEW DELHI‚ INDIA Contents ch on Textile Apparels & Clothing _____________________________________________________________________
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5. Case Study Of The Textile Industry In Tirupur 5.1 Background AS OUR CAR bounced along the narrow pot-holed road to Tirupur‚ a sign Welcome to Banian City greeted us. Banian is the local name for the white vests used mostly by men in India. This sign described what was in store for us in Tirupur. There does not seem to be any activity in the town that is not directly or indirectly connected with the manufacture and sale of banians and T-shirts. The whole world appeared to have discovered
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The Expiration of the Multi-Fiber Arrangement: An Analysis of the Consequences for South Asia Ashe Haté Shisir Khanal John Larsen Paul Smart Romina Soria David Zanni Prepared for a select group of U.S. government agencies interested in issues of trade and South Asia Public Affairs 860: Public Affairs Workshop‚ International Issues Spring 2005 Robert M. La Follette School of Public Affairs University of Wisconsin-Madison ©2005 Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System All
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Weaving: interlacing yarns Fabric Face: smoother and more lustrous; clearer and brighter print or design; more pronounced finish; floats are on the face Fabric Back: imperfections and knots; print or design duller and less distinctive; more noticeable tentering marks Warp Yarns: parallel to the salvage; thinner; stronger; more twist; usually greater in number (in unbalances weaves); straighter and more parallel; usually filament yarns (depending on fabric content) Filling Yarns: perpendicular
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