Human hair has long been valued as a fibre for its qualities of fineness, strength and elasticity. This article provides details of how hair from Asia has been used to produce textiles for the European and American markets at different moments of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. It focusses in particular on the production of hand knotted hair nets made from Chinese combings and the making of interlinings for men’s suits made from waste hair clippings from India. It also gives insights into how comb waste is still collected and sorted by hand on a massive scale today in countries such as India, Myanmar and China using techniques which have changed little since the nineteenth centur
Weaving Histories looks at the economic history of South Asia from a fresh perspective, through a de...
Through a case study format, this paper presents the examination, technical fabrication and conserva...
Today's world textile and garment trade is valued at a staggering $425 billion. We are told that und...
This article explores how hair and notions of race are entangled both within anthropology and in the...
When no longer attached to the head, human hair is disconcerting. Sometimes treated as waste or as ...
This paper examines representations of hair on the boundaries of ethnography and fashion, to complic...
International audienceThis article presents a synthesis on flax in Babylonia in the 1st millennium B...
This chapter explores ethnicity and fashion in the nineteenth century for the new multivolume collec...
This article concerns hair samples collected in 1925 in the Ojibwe community of Red Lake, Minnesota,...
The global explosion of synthetic fibers in the mid-twentieth century challenged Australia’s wool in...
This article tells about the art of carpet weaving, the history of development and the process of we...
If hairdressing is the simultaneous cultivation of hair, self and society, then cornrows are a bumpe...
Feather pelerine capes are featured in publications as collection highlights of the Victoria and Alb...
Styles, J., 'Fashion, Textiles and the Origins of Industrial Revolution', this article has been publ...
Until the late nineteenth century camphor, extracted from the camphor tree cinnamomum camphora nativ...
Weaving Histories looks at the economic history of South Asia from a fresh perspective, through a de...
Through a case study format, this paper presents the examination, technical fabrication and conserva...
Today's world textile and garment trade is valued at a staggering $425 billion. We are told that und...
This article explores how hair and notions of race are entangled both within anthropology and in the...
When no longer attached to the head, human hair is disconcerting. Sometimes treated as waste or as ...
This paper examines representations of hair on the boundaries of ethnography and fashion, to complic...
International audienceThis article presents a synthesis on flax in Babylonia in the 1st millennium B...
This chapter explores ethnicity and fashion in the nineteenth century for the new multivolume collec...
This article concerns hair samples collected in 1925 in the Ojibwe community of Red Lake, Minnesota,...
The global explosion of synthetic fibers in the mid-twentieth century challenged Australia’s wool in...
This article tells about the art of carpet weaving, the history of development and the process of we...
If hairdressing is the simultaneous cultivation of hair, self and society, then cornrows are a bumpe...
Feather pelerine capes are featured in publications as collection highlights of the Victoria and Alb...
Styles, J., 'Fashion, Textiles and the Origins of Industrial Revolution', this article has been publ...
Until the late nineteenth century camphor, extracted from the camphor tree cinnamomum camphora nativ...
Weaving Histories looks at the economic history of South Asia from a fresh perspective, through a de...
Through a case study format, this paper presents the examination, technical fabrication and conserva...
Today's world textile and garment trade is valued at a staggering $425 billion. We are told that und...