Guest guest Posted June 9, 1999 Report Share Posted June 9, 1999 [An article from "Handwoven" magazine, March/April 1997. You can order this magazine and others from The Mannings Handweaving School and Supply Center catalog.] http://www.the-mannings.com/pages/catbmag.htm article: http://www.geocities.com/Area51/Hollow/7231/flaxlinen.html FROM FLAX TO LINEN Although some 200 kinds of flax grow in the wild, flax grown for fiber is *Linuim usitatissimum* (Latin for "the most useful flax"). This species has been cultivated for centuries, and the processes for converting its fibers into yarn are nearly as old. THE FLAX PLANT The textile fibers (called bast fibers) produced by the flax plant grow the entire length of the stem as part of the phloem tissue, which conducts sugars and other nutrients to all parts of the plant. Flax in one of several plants (hemp and ramie are two others {HKDD: Is nettle also in this category?}) that produce bast fibers for textiles. In flax, the fibers arranged in bundles of ten to forty individual fibers around a woody core, held together in a band by pectinous substances and covered by an outer layer called the epidermis. Like other bast-producing plants, flax must undergo several processes to extract the fiber and prepare it for spinning. When mature and ready for harvesting, flax plants are about 39 inches tall {1 meter}. Plants intended for fiber are never cut but always *pulled* from the ground to preserve the full length of fiber. The pulled stems are laid on the ground or bundled and stacked to dry. If seeds are to be harvested, they are removed after drying by threshing (beating) or pressing the tips of the stems through a coarse metal comb (RIPPLING) to remove the seed capsules. RETTING Retting is the process of dissolving the pectins that bind the fiber bundles by the actions of molds and bacteria. The process must be carefully monitored and stopped before the pectins that cement together the individual fibers of the bundles are dissolved. Flax is retted either by keeping the stems moist with dew and rain or by immersing them in water. In dew retting, the harvested stems are laid out on grass in thin, uniform layers. Dew, rainfall, and occasional sprinkling when necessary keep the stems moist enough for molds to grow and dissolve the pectins binding the fiber bundles. The process usually takes two to four weeks, during which time the stems will be turned one or more times. Dew-retted flax is usually brown-gray in color. Alternatively, flax can be retted in standing or slowly running water. The bacterial decomposition that occurs during water retting produces an unpleasant odor, and the time needed for complete retting depends on the temperature of the water: it takes three to five days in a tank held at 86 degrees to 95 degrees Farenheit. Water-retted flax is pale gold in color. After retting, the pectins should have been dissolved, leaving the entire flax stem largely intact. The stems are dried and then subjected to mechanical processes - breaking, scutching, and hackling - that separate the fibers from the woody stem material. These procedures were developed when flax was processed by hand. Although machines now replicate these processes, textiles craftspersons still use the hand methods to prepare their own flax for spinning and weaving. BREAKING The dried flax stems are crush, bent, or crimped to break up the inner woody core (also called boon), leaving the long, flexible fibers intact. During the process, some of the boon separates and falls away from the fiber. The moisture content of the flax is important at this stage: too much moisture makes it difficult to break up the woody core effectively, while too little increases the proportion of valuable fiber wasted. SCUTCHING (OR SWINGLING) After breaking, most of the boon still adheres to the fiber. Scutching gently scrapes away as much of the clinging boon as possible without damaging the fiber. Scutching by hand uses a blunt wooden blade to scrape the fibers as they hang against a wooden board. Scutching tow, consisting of boon and short flax fibers, falls to the ground. *Depending on its quality, waste fiber is used for making paper or chipboard.* HACKLING The bundles of fiber are then drawn over hackles, combs consisting of several rows of long metal tines that remove the last remaining pieces of boon and align the long line of fibers in preparation for spinning. The waste is mostly short lengths of flax called TOW. This is spun separately into tow yarns, which are softer than LINE yarns, but not as strong or lustrous. PREPARATION FOR HANDSPINNING Finally, the hackled flax is arranged on a DISTAFF for handspinning. The distaff allows the spinner to maintain order in the bundle of very long fibers and to stop and resume spinning with a minimum of disruption FURTHER READING Baines, Patricia. *Linen: Hand Spinning and Weaving.* London: Batsford, 1989. Heinrich, Linda. *The Magic of Linen: Flax Seed to Woven Cloth.* Victoria, British Columbia: Orca, 1992. Hochberg, Bette. *Fibre Facts.* Santa Crus, California: Bette Hochberg, 1981. *The Weaver's Journal* Fall 1982, 7 (2): Issue 26. [ Captions to drawings: 1. Rippling removes the seedheads from the stalks. 2. Breaking crushes the inner woody core, leaving the fibers intact. 3. Hackling removes remnants of the core and aligns the fibers ready for spinning. 4. Flax is arranged on a distaff to be spun.] Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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