Our Weaves

Pet Recycled Fabrics

How is it different? Unlike polyester, recycled polyester uses PET as the raw material. This is the same material that is used in clear plastic water bottles, and recycling it to create the fabric prevents it from going to landfill.The next best option, after making PET bottles out of discarded PET bottles, is to make yarn from scrap PET which is then used to make various garments and products. This material is commonly known as Polyester. The fabric is purely breathable and is skin friendly.



Plain Weave

A chambray is a plain weave fabric woven with a colored yarn in the warp and a white yarn in the weft.

Seersucker Weave

Seersucker is a thin, puckered, all-cotton fabric, commonly striped or chequered, used to make clothing for spring and summer wear.


Chambray Weave

While chambray (below) and denim (above) are often confused for one another, they're not exactly the same fabric.

Oxford Weave

The Oxford weave has a basketweave structure and a lustrous aspect making it a popular fabric for a dress shirt.


Houndstooth Weave

Houndstooth, hounds tooth check or hound's tooth (and similar spellings), also known as dogstooth, dogtooth or dog's tooth, is a duotone textile pattern characterized by broken checks or abstract four-pointed shapes, often in black and white, although other colours are used. The classic houndstooth pattern is an example of a tessellation.

Flannel Weave

Flannel, flannelette, and cotton flannel can be woven in either a twillweave or plain weave. The weave is often hidden by napping on one or both sides. After weaving, it is napped once, then bleached, dyed, or otherwise treated, and then napped a second time.



Twill Weave

A twill weave can be identified by its diagonal lines. This is a 2/2 twill, with two warp threads crossing every two weft threads. Structure of a 2⁄2 twill. The offset at each row forms the diagonal pattern.


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