For beautiful
appearance and softness, chenille yarn has become the choice
of fabric designers for many items. The softness and sheen of
chenille improves the appearance and hand of thousands of everyday
items, including sweaters, outerwear fabrics, upholstery and
curtain fabrics, throws and blankets, and area rugs.Chenille
is a pile yarn that has been produced commercially since the
1970s. In the early years, the machinery used for commercial
production resulted in chenille with variable characteristics.
Modern machinery was introduced in Europe and North America
in the early 1990s, and today's chenille is a reliable and beautiful
yarn that is gaining in popularityCIMA is dedicated to improving
industry manufacturing practices through education, to assure
easier use of this beautiful yarn. Chenille is a difficult yarn
to manufacture, requiring great care in production. Due to the
nature of chenille's pile direction, pile completeness (or lack
of missing pile), and strength-to-bulk relationship, great care
must be taken in converting chenille into final articles. The
following information is designed to give an understanding of
the chenille manufacturing process and the technical specifications
necessary to properly convert chenille yarn into finished goods.
The Nature of Chenille
Chenille yarn consists of short lengths of spun yarn or filament
that are held together by two ends of highly twisted fine strong
yarn. The short lengths are called the pile and the highly twisted
yarns are called the core.Chenille yarn can be made from many
different types of fibers and yarns. Most common are cotton,
viscose (rayon), acrylic, and polypropylene (olefin). Chenille
yarn can be made in many different sizes, ranging from as heavy
as Nm 0.2 to as fine as Nm 12.0.
The Manufacturing Process: Chenille yarn is manufactured
on a machine that is designed to bring the pile yarns and core
yarns together. During manufacture, the pile yarns are wrapped
around a short stem of polished metal, called a caliper, through
which a blade passes to cut the pile yarns into short lengths.
The core yarns are pressed onto the short lengths with a rotating
metal wheel.The resulting yarn is then fed onto a traditional
ring twisting take up mechanism. In the twisting process, the
two ends of core yarn twist and trap the short ends of pile
between the core yarns. The size of the caliper determines the
diameter of the resulting yarn. The size and number of the pile
yarns and how much of them are fed onto the core determines
the count of the yarn.
Chenille Quality Tolerances: The nature of the chenille
process results in a wider range of yield and twist variation
compared to other yarn manufacturing processes. The yield and
twist tolerances are as follows:
International Specification for Chenille Count and Twist
Tolerances
Sample Size
1
5
10
25
100
Count/Yield (% ±)
20.0
10.0
6.0
4.0
2.0
Twist (% ±)
20.0
10.0
6.0
4.0
2.0
This is a new
standard. For count/yield testing, these tolerances are based
on a 25-meter sample length measured using standard practices
for tension control in regulated temperature and humidity conditions.
For twist, the tolerances are based on a standard twist tester
in regulated temperature and humidity conditions.
Chenille Yarn
Manufacture: Chenille is manufactured in a two step process.
Step one is the manufacture of the chenille onto a chenille
bobbin, and step two is the rewinding of the chenille onto a
cone or dye tube. An electronic clearer is located in the yarn
path of step two to detect lengths of yarn that have pile missing.
When the electronic clearer detects a section of missing pile
greater than the minimum setting specified (usually 3 mm), a
cutter is electronically activated. The yarn is cut, and the
winder operator then pulls the yarn back and cuts out the missing
pile section, reties the yarn, and continues winding the package.
The electronic clearer devices are almost 100% effective.
Electronic
Clearing of Missing Pile: It is important to verify with
your chenille supplier that the chenille yarn has been electronically
cleared to remove the missing pile.
Knots and Splices:
Knotting or splicing chenille must be done carefully to avoid
defects in the items that use chenille yarn. Simply tying a
knot in the chenille yarn itself creates such a defect, so there
are two alternative methods for "tying" the chenille
yarn.Method one is a core knot. This is made by stripping back
the pile of both ends of the chenille sufficiently so that it
is possible to tie a double square knot in the core yarns. Care
has to be taken to hold the twist in the yarn ends where the
pile starts. Once the double square knot is tied, the ends are
clipped close to the small knot. The pile ends are then pushed
over the knot.Method two uses a splice. To create the splice,
the two ends of chenille are overlapped 1 ½ to 2 inches and
a mechanical wrap-around splicing device applies the wrap yarn.
The wrap yarn can be either a fine monofilament nylon or a very
fine yarn of the same fiber as the chenille pile.
Pile Direction:
The chenille manufacturing process creates pile that lies in
one direction. When woven into a fabric, chenille reflects light
differently when viewed from different directions. This is known
as the "reflection effect," and it is one of the unique
and desirable characteristics of chenille goods. Because of
this, strict control of the pile direction must be maintained
during both the step of manufacturing the chenille and also
all subsequent processes required to convert the chenille into
a finished article. It is not possible accurately to visually
evaluate the direction of natural or dyed chenille yarn in its
yarn form. Weaving the chenille yarn into a solid test fabric
is the only way of detecting the true direction of a yarn. The
appearance of a "V" or an inverted "V" in
the pile can reflect other characteristics of the chenille yarn
other than direction.
Following step one of manufacturing, the yarn has direction
one. After the winding process in step two, the yarn has direction
two. The chenille yarn producer has taken all the necessary
steps to ensure that the chenille yarn is all in the same direction
when it is shipped to the user.The chenille yarn user must take
care to maintain the same pile direction throughout manufacturing.
For example, with yarn sold on dye tubes and coned after dying,
if rewinding is necessary (as in the case of cross-wound yarn
or packages that are too hard or soft), the yarn must be rewound
TWICE so that all the yarn remains in the original pile direction.
If this rule is not strictly observed, streaks will result in
the final fabric.
Fiber Composition: Fiber composition is quoted on the
chenille yarn supplier's invoice and on the yarn cone. If the
yarn is put up on a dye carrier, labels are not used on the
yarn carrier to avoid possible interference during the dyeing
process.