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Fabric Dyeing 101
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We have a new Columnist! Ask Jennifer all your dyeing questions..
Vintage Fabrics
May 20 - Wrights - Memories of an American Institution
May 20 - Underground Railroad Quilt Code
October 20 - Up Close and Personal with Vintage Aprons
November 20 - Colorful Vintage Tablecloths and Towels
September 20 - The Legacy of Warren Featherbone
May 20 - Some Costumes for Elderly Ladies
March 20 - And That's a Wrap - Oh to be in my ki-moni-yo
February 20 - Life Was a Breeze with Fans
January 20 - Please Don't Ridicule My Reticule!
April 20 - More Mill Connections
February 20 - One Woman's Failed Struggle to Quit the Fabric Habit
January 20 - The Indian Head Connection 3
October 20 - The Indian Head Connection 2
September 20 - The Indian Head Connection 1
August 20 - Recycling Vintage Fabrics
July 20 - Sanforized: Fabric's Best Friend
June 20 - History of the Printed Tablecloth
May 20 - Decorative Relief Carving in Wooden Spools
April 20 - Vintage Hankies - More Than Sneeze Catchers
March 20 - Indian Head Remembered - Revisiting An American Institution
February 20 - Doll Couture Vintage Style
January 20 - Meet the Azlons from A to Z: Regenerated & Rejuvenated
December 20 - Osnaburg the Great
Part 2 Home Beautiful with Cretonne, Chintz, Barkcloth & Crash
November 20 - Osnaburg the Great Part I -- Feedsacks on Our Backs
October 20 - WWII Fashions Part 2 --All Dolled up
September 20 - Cotton Dyeing in the 18th & 19th Century
August 20 - Hooked on Buttons
July 20 - Pillow Talk
June 20 - WWII Fashions
May 20 - A Going-Away Dress
April 20 - Harriet Quimby
January 20 - Capes
December 20 - Umbrellas
November 20 - Weaveprints
October 20 - Grenadine
September 20 - Bias Tape
August 20 - Dolls
July 20 - Thread Chart
June 20 - Vintage Costuming
April 20 - Building A Textile Reference Library
March 20 - Profile of Collector
February 20 - Feedbags
January 20 - Cambric
December 20 - Gizmos
November 20 - Trims
October 20 - Stores 1920-59
September 20 - 1880-1919
August 20 - Sweatshops
July 20 - Label Scandal
June 20 - Bias Tape
Extra: Bias Tape Chart
May 20 - Miracle Fibers
April 20, 2000
March 20, 2000
February 20, 2000
January 20, 2000
December 20, 1999
Ask Andy
December 20 2007
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Guest Columnists
Dyeing Stretch Velvet
Sewing Dance Costumes as a Business
Window Treatments
Stretch Velvet
QuiltVisions
September 20 - Quilt colors
July 20 - Quilt colors for summer weather: Are you ready?
September 20 - Can every quilt be your favorite?
April 20 - Ideas: Springtime color bursts feed our imaginings
March 20 - Quilt ideas are You-nique
August 20 - Inspiration is all around us
May 20 - Purpose leads quilters to joyful adventure
January 20 - Remembering loved ones with a quilt vision
December 20 - Pleasing, honoring, creating = JOY
November 20 - It's Not too Late For a Christmas Quilt!
October 20 - Recipe for happy quilts: Seeing Red!
August 20 - State Flowers: the longest online swap?
July 20 - Summertime and a quilt is. .
June 20 - Black and white and. . . what?
May 20 - Busy agenda vs. quilt workshops
April 20 - Challenge quilts try us, stretch us
March 20 - Inspirations at home make quilts sing and bloom
February 20 - A Joyful Quilter is a Treasure
January 20 - Imagination sparks Elm Creek quilters and us!
December 20 - Whoops! Ten tips to turn celebrations into quilts
November 20 - What's good enough for Grandma is good enough for me!
October 20 - What's in a name?
September 20 - Heart influences
August 20 - Color studies prove magical
July 20 - United in Memory Quilt
June 20 - Purple and gold
May 20 - Color your world with Wow!
April 20 - Themes carry out dreams
March 20 - Quilt Condos and Communities
February 20 - "I just did it"
January 20 - Small Groups
December 20 - Lively Quilts Get Out of Bed
November 20 - How are we Remembered?
October 20 - Quilt Shows
September 20 - Comforting NY
August 20 - Spirit and joy
July 20 - Shop, Shop...
June 20 - There's always a beginning
A Quilter is Born
October 20 - Washington Quilt Show
August 20 - Fabric Choices
July 20 - Quilting Disasters
June 20 - Guilds and Groups
May 20 - A Quilter is Born
Fabric Distinctions
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Quality in Apparel
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Olefin
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Wild Women Who Sew
August 20
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January/February, 2001:
Cambric:
Gone with the Wind
Queen Elizabeth and cohorts nearly choked in it; Errol
Flynn and his real-live counterparts brandished their swords in it; Scarlett and her
friends often swooned in it as their corsets were being tightened; untold babes took their
first step in it; teary-eyed damsels wiped their eyes with it; countless women sported
flowers of it on their suits, dresses and hats; book collectors loved its satiny feel;
many of us probably have it in our fabric stash without realizing it.
It is of course cambric, once the all-purpose textile. One
could go on endlessly about this remarkable fabric and its seemingly infinite variations.
Tres Fine et Tres Blanche
| Cambric has been with us at least since the
early 16th century when it was first made of linen in the northern French town
of Cambrai. Savary des Bruslons described it as a sort toile de lin, tres fine and tres
blanche. It was used for fichus, head trimmings, shirts, cravettes, ties, nightwear and
ecclesiastical garments. One day , Samuel Rowland
Fisher visiting Ireland in 1768 stopped at John Christys store and was shown great
quantities of "wondorus cambricks" made by him but not equal to those of France.
He was told, alas, that several persons from "Cambray have the management of linen
and cambray weaving." |

At least the bearded men had some chin protection
from scratchy ruffs. One wonders how easy it was to turn the neck. These cambric ruffs
date from Henry IV, 1590-early 1600s.
- The Mode in Costume |
Rare English fashion plates of the 1780s
show the new light textiles muslin, cambric and lawn, calling them diaphanous
compared to brocades, the other fashion favorite.
By 1812 the artful Irish, by virtue of a Petitioneers
Machine, were able to create their own version of cambrick, producing cotton yarns of
treble fineness and of a much more soft and pleasant texture than any which had ever
before been spun in Great Britain. It should be noted that some references credit
Scotland with producing the first cotton cambric and not Ireland.
In 1810, the Boston Palladium advertised a
"Fashionable Suit of Curtains, 168 years of cambrick chintz, ditto 168 yards of light
blue lining cambrick." Ackermanns advertised from 1809 to 1812 cambricks in morine*
corded, imperial stripes, seaweed printed, jubilee twill shawl and permanent morone [we
know it as maroon] printed. *Morine is a variation of moreen, a British heavy fabric with
horizontal filling and a moire finish, woven either in worsted or cotton. It was used for
upholstery and skirts.
By this time, many countries were producing cambric of
various quality; some types resembled fine muslin. Cambric goods from Hamburg, Flanders,
Bengal, Germany and England were represented by ticking, mens coats, breeches,
waistcoats and womens shoes.
A Robe de Nuit, a night gown advertised as one of
the newest styles in 1851, was made of linen cambric and valenciennes lace and was
intended for a trousseau, though it could be made very prettily of any style
of plain cambric or muslin with less expensive edging.
As Many As Heinzs
57 Varieties
Cambrics dense weave and superior smooth hard finish
made it one of the most popular and versatile fabrics for nearly four centuries.
From clothing to trims to book coverings to belting to
corsets to shoes to church cloth, cambric was a staple fabric.
For instance, an ad in an1890 Ladies Home Journal
extolled the superiority of cambric Babies, young ladies, married ladies, your
white garments, aprons, pillow-shams, etc. should be made of the cambrics, lawns or
nainsnooks made by the King Philip Mills
send stamps for samples.
A dressmaking column in The Womans Home
Companion, October 1903, advised for interlining to use haircloth or canvas,
tacking it very lightly and invisibly to the goods and a facing of silk or mercerized
cotton applied over it. The upper edge of the haircloth must be bound with thin cambric or
percaline.
Sears 1908 catalog featured nine grades of cambric yard
goods for undergarments ranging from muslin quality to superior-wearing Wamsutta sea
island cotton plus a lining or paper cambric which was not washable. There was a
staggering array of red turkey cambric shirtings, Jones and Berkley cambrics -- heavier
versions of nainsnook, for infant and childrens clothes and dainty ladies
waists [blouses]; percales and calicos called cambric for dresses and pillowcases.
| Another four pages offered hundreds of eyelet
and embroidered trims and flouncings, and collars and cuffs. In the ready to wear, another
10 pages flaunted the luxury of cambric drawers, petticoats, corset covers and outerwear
trimmed in medici and valenciennes laces, silk ribbon insertions and lawn ruffles. But all that started to fade in the post-WWI years as technology
and new lifestyles began to change how persons acted and what they wore. Sadly by 1923
cambric was shifted to the back shelf. A textile glossary of that year defined cambric as
heavily sized and too stiff for comfortable wear, and because of its heavy yarns, better
for cool weather. In good grades, it was used for underwear, corset covers, combinations
[a half slip attached to the waist of one-piece teddy-type sleeveless top with panties and
used for childrens wear], drawers, chemises, nightgowns and pajamas; in the cheaper
grades, for linens and foundations where a slightly stiffened fabric was required. |

Utility and lesser dress grades of cambric
were usually found in the domestic section of most catalogs.
- Sears Catalog, 1908

First signs of the decline of cambric: even the top
grades were now lumped in with all other domestic fabrics.
- Montgomery Ward Catalog,
1925 |
A 1926 textile glossary added aprons,
shirts, scrap books, fancy dress costumes for pageants, church embroidery, lunch cloths,
napkins, doilies, collars and cuffs.
 |
 |
| The OTHER cambrics
-- cheap, off-grain, heavily sized, non-washable. At left is a highly glazed and
stiff WWII cambric suitable for pageantry and halloween costumes. When washed [see inset],
fabric lost body and finish. At right is an example of a 1930s attractive disposable trim
in paper cambric and what is thought to be bookbinding cambric, probably from the
1930s-40s. Both are wide grain and held together by glue. When these two were handwashed,
they became a sticky mass. |
By 1953 it was listed as an obsolete yard
goods fabric. Handkerchief linen cambric is still available, usually offered by specialty
shops. It is also available wholesale by some European firms and used by professional
textile conservators in protection and wrapping capacities.
Whats So Special About Cambric?
Cambric has many admirable qualities. It is a
closely woven rather firm cotton fabric with a slight glossy surface produced by
calendering [a type of finish producing a glossy or silky appearance which can be
permanent or wash out]. The better grades are made from fine yarns, carefully bleached and
finished.
It belongs to the batiste, jaconet, lawn, longcloth, mull
and nainsnook family. As all these fabrics are produced in various grades and finishes, it
takes an expert to distinguish one from the other after they have been laundered a few
times. Good quality longcloth and cambric probably are most similar, although longcloth
has a softer finish.
 |
| Wide flouncing from an 1890s
high-quality ivory cambric petticoat. Even though washed, it retains its crispness and
sheen. Damaged petticoats are idea for recycling to dress antique dolls, such as these two
German Kestner bisques circa early 1900s-WWI, shown in lightweight cambric. It was common
for petticoats to have two layers of flouncing with the under layer of lightly
gathered cambric and plain; the top of fully gathered lawn and lace and sometimes tucks. |
Cambric is the easiest to identify due to
its hard smooth surface, often referred to as glossy, and heavier weave than its
relatives. Usually it retains most of its luster and smoothness after repeated
launderings.
| In fact, so outstanding is cambrics
surface that in many of its catalogs Sears referred to its best percales as having a
cambric finish and collectively called all its fine percales cambric. Actually, Sears and
Montgomery Ward catalogs as far back as the late 1880s referred to percales and calicoes
as cambric. The textile industry is loaded with contradictions. However, keep in mind that the cambric described here has been for
domestic and dress use. Looser, coarser cambric, off-grain, heavily sized and non-washable
was manufactured for use in book bindings, artificial flowers, pageantry costumes, cheap
linings and throw-away trims, to name a few. |

The best percales had a cambric finish and
sometimes were called cambrics.
- Sears
Catalog, 1908 |
Looking for Cambric In
Your Collection
Chances are if you collect old fabric or garments such as
petticoats, christening gowns and childrens underwear, you will have cambric.
How can you tell if its cambric? Good question. My
first connection was in 1980 when a friend, the late Lou Thompson, author of The Lace
Sample Book and a vintage fabric and antique dealer, gave me a swatch each of linen
and cotton cambric. She understood my needs for dressing antique dolls and said cambric
would be essential to doll dressing. She may just as well have given me a slab of bacon
because I had no idea what she was talking about. Then when I began seeing the real thing
at doll shows and later learned more about the intricacies of costuming, I understood the
significance and came to appreciate the advice. Like Virginia Slims, Ive come a long
way since.
| I have found that linen or cotton cambric has
a slight occasional linen-like slub. Run your hand over fabric. Theres a hardness,
smooth and glossy, that you wont find on other fabrics, the exceptions being
superior percale or sea island cotton. However, cambric will be slightly heavier and
slippery. As noted before there is also a great resemblance to longcloth; both have that
erratic slub and after being washed, dry somewhat rumpled like linen.. Longcloth is a
slightly looser and lighter weave with a duller finish. |

Comparison of washed, unironed cambric [l] and
longcloth. While the longcloth swatch is not as fine quality as the cambric swatch, the
similarity in weave is still visible.
|
Because of its smooth, hard surface cambric
can be creased or folded easily you can hear it fall into place like the snap of a
crisp pickle. It folds true to line and best of all, it holds its shape with finger
pressing, eliminating the need to iron seams during sewing for the most part.
How to Sew with Cambric
Cambric is like no other fabric to sew. On the plus side
it behaves beautifully due to its hard surface; minimal raveling, no stretching, yet
flexible. On the down side, trying to get a needle through its denseness is like trying to
puncture cement. And if you have to rip, there will be holes.
| The key is to use either #9 or #11 machine
needles, regardless of fabric weight. Better yet, use the two smallest sizes of Schmetz
microtex needles, 70/10 and 80/12. For comparison, the latter is equivalent to #9. These
needles, developed for todays microfiber fabrics and silk, have a thinner shaft but
a larger eye, making them easy to thread. If you have to rip, they leave no holes. So
superior are these needles, I use them now for most everything except knits. I have also
found that lighter weight cambrics cut more easily with scissors designed for sheers,
lightweights and silks, such as the Gingher brand shown here. |

Sewing aids to make life easier when working with
cambric -- microtex needles and scissors designed for cutting sheers and silks.
|
Now that you are more acquainted with the
properties of cambric, take the time to check your fabrics and old garments to see if you
may have some of this long-gone marvelous material.
References:
Godeys Ladys Book & Magazine, Vol. LI from July to December
1855
Petersons Magazine, from January to June 1863
Sears and Montgomery Ward Catalogs, 1887, 1908, 1925
Textile Fabrics, Elizabeth Dyer, 1923
Fabrics and How to Know Them, Grace Denny, 1926, 1947, 1953 editions
The Mode in Costume, R. Turner Wilcox, 1958
Fairchilds Dictionary of Textiles, 7th edition, 1996
Fabric Glossary, Mary Humphries, 1999
Linda Learn, owner Class Act Fabrics, re-enactment costumer and textile lecturer
Excerpts from Fashion through Fashion Plates 1771-1970 , Doris Langley Moore and Mr
Godeys Ladies by Robert Kunciov and magazine ads provided by author and collector
Thelma Bernard.
Next Month: Feedbags
Coming soon: What quilters Want and
Building A Textile Reference Library
The arbitrary cut-off date for
this Vintage Fabric column is 1960. To stay within the scope of this timeframe, reference
materials published up to that date are the prime source of information to more accurately
capture actual thoughts of the time.
If you are interested in vintage fabrics and textile production, email Joan@fabrics.net . Your topic or query could be of
interest to collectors and professionals whose hobbies or research require knowledge and
use of old fabrics and their contemporary counterparts.
Joan Kiplinger is an antique doll costumer and vintage
fabric addict who learned to sew on her grandmother's treadle and has been peddling
fabrications ever since.
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