Wholesale Yarn Supplier Company Turkey

Hanteks® is a wholesale yarn supplier company in Turkey.


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        IIM  is  manufacturer and wholesale yarn supplier in Istanbul Turkey. We are one of the leading wholesale yarn supplier company  in Turkey. We have got 10 tons / day manufacturing capacity for colored yarn. We have got 100 different  coloured yarn  in our stock  You could also give your order according to your sample colors. Hanteks is one of the leading wholesale yarn supplier in Turkey with a capacity of 360tons/year.Wholesale yarn range is from NE8/1 TO NE40/1, wholesale cotton yarn suplier.Whenever you want, you could order NE 20/1 cotton yarn from our stock.
You will buy the wholesale cotton yarn at best prices from us because IIM is the leading wholesaler for cotton yarns in Turkey.

 

For more information and wholesale price list, please do not hasitate to contact us.

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Address:
istoc Trade Center C-Plaza K:2 No:14
Bagcilar/Istanbul/Turkey
Tel : 90 (212) 659 05 09
Fax : 90 (212) 659 52 09

info@sock-yarn-manufacturer.com



 

 


%100 Cotton Sock Yarn Manufacturer in TURKEY

General information about YARN.
Yarn manufacturing was one of the very first processes that was industrialized. Yarn used for fabric manufacture is made by spinning short lengths various types of fibers. Synthetic fibers which has high strength, artificial lusture, and fire retardant qualities are blended with natural fibers which have good water absorbance and skin comforting qualities, in different proportions to manufacture yarn for fabric. We only offer you our wholesale yarn supplier company turkey because we are best. The most widely used blends are cotton-polyester and wool-acrylic fiber blends.
Knitters often use worsted-weight yarn spun from the wool of a sheep, though mohair, angora, and alpaca are also well-known. Natural fibres such as these have the advantage of being slightly elastic and very breathable, while trapping a great deal of air, making fabric.Other natural fibers that can be used for yarn include silk, linen, and cotton. These tend to be much less elastic than the animal-hair yarns, though they can be stronger in some cases. The finished product will also look rather different from the woolen yarns.The object of spinning and of the processes that precede it is to transform the single fibers into a cohesive and workable continuous-length yarn. Processes that staple fibers go through vary according to the type of fiber. Cotton, wool, flax, jute, and the other natural fibers have different spinning systems, and wool and some of the bast fibers use two different systems resulting in yarns with differing properties. Basically, in the case of natural fibers, the processing involves opening, blending, carding (in some cases also combing), drawing, and roving to produce the material for the spinning frame. This isfollowed by the spinning itself .
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General information about COTTON.
Cotton plant as imagined and drawn by John Mandeville in the 14th century Oklahoma Cotton Field. Overseer and Negro cottonpickers, ca. 1897-98.Cotton has been used to make very fine lightweight cloth in areas with tropical climates for millennia. Some authorities claim that it was likely that the Egyptians had cotton as early as 12,000 BC, and evidence has been found of cotton in Mexican caves (cotton cloth and fragments of fibre interwoven with feathers and fur) which dated back to approximately 7,000 years ago and wholesale yarn supplier company turkey. There is clear archaeological evidence that people in South America and India domesticated different species of cotton independently thousands of years ago.The earliest written reference to cotton is in India. Cotton has been grown in India for more than three thousand years, and it is referred to in the Rig-Veda, written in 1500 BC. A thousand years later the great Greek historian Herodotus wrote about Indian cotton: "There are trees which grow wild there, the fruit of which is a wool exceeding in beauty and goodness that of sheep. The Indians make their clothes of this tree wool".  During the late mediaeval period, cotton became known as an imported fibre in northern Europe, without any knowledge of what it came from other than that it was a plant; people in the region, familiar only with animal fibres (wool from sheep), could only imagine that cotton must be produced by plant-borne sheep. John Mandeville, writing in 1350, stated as fact the now-preposterous belief: "There grew there India a wonderful tree which bore tiny lambs on the endes of its branches. These branches were so pliable that they bent down to allow the lambs to feed when they are hungrie.". This aspect is retained in the name for cotton in many European languages, such as German Baumwolle, which translates as "tree wool".By the end of the 16th century BC, cotton was cultivated throughout the warmer regions in Africa, Eurasia and the Americas.The Indian cotton processing industry was eclipsed during the British Industrial Revolution, when the invention of the Spinning Jenny (1764) and Arkwright's spinning frame (1769) enabled cheap mass-production of cotton cloth in the UK. Production capacity was further improved by the invention of the cotton gin by Eli Whitney in 1793.
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Genreral information about SOCK.
The word sock comes from the latin word soccus, which was a type of low-heeled loose-fitting shoe or slipper, used by the Greeks and also by Roman comedians. It then passed through Old English socc and Middle English socke. The latin word may have derived from the ancient Greek sukkhos which was a Phrygian shoe. This word was probably derived from some Asian language.
Socks in Popular Culture
In western culture one of a pair of socks is popularly understood to disappear, usually at some point during the washing and drying process, leaving the owner with many socks without mates. There are any number of humorous theories to "explain" the disappearance.MORE...

 


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