What are the finest yacht linens?
Posted: 9 July, 2009 Filed under: Product Comments | Tags: linen, natural linen, natural linens Leave a comment »
The world’s most luxurious linens are feted by business leaders, top entertainers and royalty the world over. They are found extensively in the villas, yachts and chalets that few are rarely are privileged to see.
Quality, excellence by the use of the finest natural fibres and craftsmanship establish and maintain the leading linen companies’ reputations in that market.
KOTHEA’s unmistakeable handwoven linens continue to set the highest standards for the competition to follow.
Cashmere throws – bespoke / custom sizes
Posted: 8 July, 2009 Filed under: Product Comments | Tags: finished goods, natural fabric, natural fabrics, natural linen, natural linens Leave a comment »
To supplement our range of coloured cashmere throws (147 x 183 cm), we now have the ability to weave 100% cashmere throws in any size up to a maximum width of 220cm in off-white and natural colours.
Our hand woven linen throws (pictured) can also be woven in bespoke dimensions, to order.
Usage of Linen Velvet
Posted: 8 May, 2009 Filed under: Product Comments | Tags: natural linen, velvet, velvets 1 Comment »KOTHEA was asked what linen velvet fabric could be used for.
A. General uses. Upholstery, curtains, cushions. The 100% linen velvet we have has a Martindale / Rub Test of 20,000 so it is certainly suitbale for appropriate upholstery uses.
Black & Pink Fabrics
Posted: 21 April, 2009 Filed under: Product Comments | Tags: mohair velvet, mohair velvets, natural linen, natural linens, velvets Leave a comment »Sometimes we can all get a little carried away with the modern staples of colour. The muted neutrals, the taupe and dare I even say it, beige.
We’ve added some new colours to several of our ranges. Shades of pink and black! Not earth shattering news perhaps but black velvets and pink linens are asked for more often than you’d think.
KOTHEA also have black fabrics in interesting textures such as mohair velvet, bobbly wool and a cord / corduroy.
Dyes and Pigments in Fabric
Posted: 2 February, 2009 Filed under: Environmental, Product Comments | Tags: contract fabrics, eco-friendly linen, natural fabric, natural fabrics, natural linen, natural linens, silk fabric, silk fabrics, silks, wool, wools 1 Comment »A Brief History of Natural Dyes (Mordants)
A dye is a substance that gives colour to fabric. Usually in a way such that washing, heating or lighting does not change the colour greatly.
Dyes tend to be carbon based (ie organic in a chemical sense) whereas pigments are very fine powders ‘disolved’ in a liquid. Pigments generally give brighter colours and are man-made.
Dyes have existed for at least 4000 years and, before 1850, were almost entirely from natural sources such as plants, trees and lichens but also sometimes from insects. Here are some natural dyes, rarely used today, and their sources:
1. Yellow
Seeds, stems and leaves of the weld plant
The inner bark of the North American oak ‘quercetin’
Dried petals of false saffron (safflower)
2. Red
Crushed insect bodies from Coccus (cochineal) or it’s distant relation Kermes.
3. Blue
From indigo or woad
4. Purple
From the medium sized predatory sea snail ‘commonly’ known as Murex.
5. Black
From the middle wood of the Logwood tree. This is still used today to dye silk and leather and is combined with Chromium. I have written other articles about how this ‘natural’ dye is one of the most damaging to the environment because of the use of chromium.
The art of the dye was historically a closely guarded secret with practitioners having their formulae to produce the colours and to retain them by the addition of various metal salts.
Cotton could not be directly dyed whereas wool and silk could. To add a dye to cotton the cotton had to be first treated with salts made from aluminium (red), magnesium (violet), tin, calcium (purple-red), copper, barium (blue) and iron (black-violet) and then dyed. These salts are called mordants.
The Start Of Synthetic Dyes
In the 1850s Chromium was found to give superior dye retention and so started the decline of the natural dye. Chromium mordants are still widely used for wool and less so for silk and nylon.
More precisely, the first commercially successful dye was ‘mauve’ discovered in England in 1856 and taken to market the following year. It was only sold for about 7 years but that was sufficient to start the dramatic decline of natural dyes and the investment in the science for newer and better dyes.
The Chromium discovery meshed well with the Industrial Revolution. The massively growing textile industry in Europe required a cheap and predictable manufacturing process. Natural dyes and mordants could require up to 20 steps in production, the colour could be variable and the dyes had to be transported unreliably from around the world. Because of these factors and the development of chemical science it is easy to see how by-products of coal tar extraction & coke production, abundant in Europe, became the foundation of the modern dye industry.
By 1900 nearly 90 percent of industrial dyes were synthetic.
Pre-war (WWI) Germany dominated the commercial dye market accounting for 90% of all output. Many German scientists worked with distilled cemicals from coal tar, an abundant by-product of the industrial revolution at the time. The German succes was probably due to their investment in the scientific method and in training scientists themselves. Some further ‘by-products’ of the research include aspirin and saccharin.
After WWI the industry gravitated to Britain (ICI), the USA and Switzerland, also moving away from coal tar to petroleum based research.
Perhaps only now with the ‘green’ movement are we seeing a resurgence of interest in natural dyes. KOTHEA cautions the environmentally conscious reader to look carefully at claims of dyes to be natural. Whilst they may well be made from natural materials the processes used along the way can be VERY damaging to the environment.
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Bleached Fabric & Environmental Impact
Posted: 13 January, 2009 Filed under: Environmental, Product Comments | Tags: eco-friendly linen, natural fabric, natural fabrics, natural linen, natural linens 2 Comments »Most of us are familiar with household (chlorine-based) bleach, which is sodium hypochlorite. It is a very powerful bleaching agent and, like similar agents used in the industrial bleaching of fabrics, it has by-products that include; dioxins, furans and organochlorides.
An alternative to a chlorine based bleach is Hydrogen Peroxide (H2O2). This has medical uses and domestic uses such as for bleaching hair.
Hydrogen peroxide occurs naturally by the action of sunlight on water and is simply water plus an extra oxygen molecule (2 lots of H20 plus one lot of 02 equals 2 lots of H2o2 for all you chemists). Hydrogen peroxide is quite reactive and so easily gives up some of its oxygen to revert back to water. This act of giving up oxygen to something else, like fabric, causes the fabric or impurities in it to be oxidised. The oxidised parts of the fabric are chemically changed and lose their colour. They remain there but their colour is changed. That’s what makes it a bleach and so the end products are just the oxidised fabric and water.
Natural linen has a light brown or beige colour. To go lighter than this it has to be either bleached, or bleached and dyed.
If your clients are environmentally conscious and concerned about the environmental impact of the products they buy from you, it would be prudent to ensure that your linen is hydrogen peroxide bleached rather than chlorine bleached.
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Directory Listings Of Top End Fabric Suppliers In The UK
Posted: 6 January, 2009 Filed under: Companies | Tags: chenille, contract fabric, fake leather, faux leather, hand woven linens, mohair velvet, natural linen, raffia, sheer linen, sheer linens, silk damask, silk velvets, textured upholstery fabric, wool Leave a comment »Click the fabric company name for their web site:
Abbot and Boyd 020 7351 9985
Altfield 020 7351 5893
Alton Brooke 020 7376 7008
Borderline 020 7823 3567
Brian Yates 01524 35035
Brunswig 020 7351 5797
Bruno Triplet 020 7823 9990
Chase Erwin 020 8875 7441
Colefax 020 7244 7427
Colony Fabrics 020 7351 3232
Donghia 020 7823 3456
Gainsborough Silk 01787 372081
Henry Bertrand 020 7349 1477
Jab 020 7349 9323
Jane Churchill 020 7244 7427
Jrobertscott 020 7376 4705
KOTHEA 0870 285 4768
Kravet 020 7795 0110
Lee Jofa 020 7823 3455
Lelievre 020 7352 4798
Manuel Canovas 020 8877 6400
Nobilis 020 7351 7878
Pierre Frey 0207 376 55 99
Robert Allen 01494 474741
Sacho Hesslein 020 7352 6168
Silk Gallery 020 7351 1790
Turnell and Gigon 020 7259 7280
Watts Westminster 020 7376 4486
Zimmer and Rhode 020 7351 7115
Zoffany 08708 300 350
Many of these fabric companies sell a wide range of products including: chenille, contract fabric, faux / fake leather, mohair velvet, linen velvet, cotton velvet, wool, hand woven products, natural silk, cashmere and damask for upholstery, curtains and cushions.
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BS7176 BS5852 Crib 5 - A Guide
Upholstery Linen – Sourcing Luxury Upholstery Linen in the UK
Posted: 17 January, 2011 | Author: Nathalie Arrigone | Filed under: Contract Fabric, Domestic Fabric, interior design, interior designer, interiordesign, Upholstery, Upholstery Fabric | Tags: Business, domestic fabric, domestic fabrics, fabric, faux leather upholstery, ideas for designers, interior design, linen, natural linen, natural linens, Textile, Textiles and Nonwovens, Upholstery, Upholstery and Furnishing, upholstery fabric, upholstery linen, upholstry fabric | 5 Comments »Upholstery Linen
Upholstery Linen is notoriously difficult for interior designers to source. Sourcing linens for curtains is easy enough but often linens are not woven with sufficient strength to score Martindale results that are high enough to warrant using the fabric for upholstery.
Some suppliers can be a little evasive and will quote the weight of the linen as a measure of the linen’s quality. The implicaiton being that the higher the weight the better suited the fabric will be for upholstery. There is some thuth in that implication but you cannot say for certain that a high weight linen is inherently suitable for upholstery. Get the Martindale!
Most KOTHEA luxury upholstery linens have inherent Martindale rub tests of around 20,000 rubs with one range further strengthened to 85,000 rubs for contract usage – 20,000 Martindale being eminently suitable for domestic upholstery.
Furthermore when buying upholstery- (or curtain-) linen you need to know whether or not it will shrink when washed. Linen ALWAYS shrinks. So what you have to find out is whether or not it has been pre-shrunk before you buy it. A common way of pre-shrinking linen is through the sanforisation process.
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Here are the details of our new 2011 upholstery linens that are named Recline, Relax and Restful. We have many others, these are just the new ones:
Name: Recline
Usage: Luxury Contract Upholstery
Colourways: 24
Width: 135cm
Comp: 54% Li 35% Co 11% Pa
Weight: >350g/m2
Notes: Martindale >85,000
Request Samples
Name: Relax
Usage: Luxury Domestic Upholstery
Colourways: 24
Width: 135cm
Comp: 100% Li
Weight: >265 g/m2
Notes: Martindale >15,000
Request Samples
Name: Restful
Usage: Heavyweight Luxury Domestic Upholstery
Colourways: 4
Width: 135cm
Comp: 100% Li
Weight: >470 g/m2
Notes: Martindale >45,000
Request Samples
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