Textile printing cloth mounted on paperboard with fastner closure.
Textile Materials Brief Introduction
Textile or cloth materials are popular to be applied as lining and wrapping paper during a jewelry box printing job. Actually it is a flexible and soft material consisting of natural or artificial fibers. Raw fibers may include wool, flax, cotton, or other materials.
Normally textiles or cloths are formed by weaving, knitting, crocheting, knotting, or pressing fibers. Textiles have an assortment of uses, and the most common is for clothing and containers such as bags and baskets. In workplace, they are used in industrial and scientific processes such as filtering. Textiles are often dyed, with fabrics available in almost every color. The dying process often requires several dozen gallons of water for each pound of clothing.
Different colors designed in textiles can be created by weaving together fibers of different colors, adding colored stitches to finished fabric, creating patterns by resist dyeing methods, tying off areas of cloth and dyeing the rest, or drawing wax designs on cloth and dyeing in between them or using various printing processes on finished fabric. Textiles are also sometimes bleached, making the textile pale or white.
Regularly, it is screen printing but not offset printing that is applied to cloth or textile materials. But if the cloth is rigid enough to procced available to high-speed cylinder, the offset printing could be applied to this material. Two printing methods could create fantastic and amazing colorful decorative surface finishing. But debossing, foil stamping, flocking and so on are workable to cloth or textile materials. |