Cheesecloth does that.  You can wash it and use the crinkly result for
Greek dress onstage.

Kate
609-570-3584
-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Behalf Of Sharon Collier
Sent: Sunday, May 20, 2007 5:20 PM
To: 'Historical Costume'
Subject: RE: [h-cost] not Perpignan, but... (stretchy wools)

That reminds me of some gauze fabric I had years ago. It was really
lovely
and I made a shirt out of it. But when washed, it shrank up a lot, got
all
crinkly. I had to iron it to get it to be flat again. It would have made
great hose.

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On
Behalf Of E House
Sent: Thursday, May 17, 2007 10:35 AM
To: Historical Costume
Subject: [h-cost] not Perpignan, but... (stretchy wools)


Not too long ago I chanced on a very interesting piece of wool fabric.
It's

100% wool, but due to the way it's made, it has as much natural stretch
as a

lycra/wool blend!  (Yes, I'm sure it's 100% wool.)

It's a slightly loose basket weave, but that alone isn't what makes it
so 
stretchy; rather, the stretchiness seems to come from the fact that both

warp and weft are VERY tightly twisted.  With the slightly loose weave,
both

warp and weft sort of crimp up a lot more than you usually see, so when
you 
pull on it, the threads straighten out temporarily.  The tightness of
the 
spinning keeps the whole thing from shrinking up; the weave stays
slightly 
loose.  (If it shrank at all after I washed it, the amount was too small
for

me to measure.)  When pulled, it stretches to about 110%-115% of its 
original length/width.  That may not sound like much, but it's a whole
lot 
when, say, you're making a supportive gown, or a pair of hose.

I'm in love with it.  I've got about 7 yds of it, and I am afraid to use
it,

because my hoarding instinct says it must be saved for the exact right 
project.  (It wants to be 2 different styles of supportive undergowns,
and I

think I can get both out of it, but then it'd be gone and I'd lose/gain
20 
lbs and be unable to wear them.)

But more importantly, it has completely changed my idea of how much
stretch 
medieval wool fabrics might have had!  I've read archaeological reports
of 
worsted textiles made from yarns spun with a high twist before; I am now

going to go back and give them a much closer look.  Somehow, I doubt
that 
the archaeologists who studied those textiles gave 'em a good stretch...

-E House



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