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2 Calendering

Calendering is a process that presses or irons fabric under high pressure to create different surface finishes. It involves passing fabric between heated metal rollers. The specific finish depends on roller material and speed. Common types include simple, glazed, embossed, and moire calendering. The goal is to smooth, pattern, or add luster to fabrics.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
493 views42 pages

2 Calendering

Calendering is a process that presses or irons fabric under high pressure to create different surface finishes. It involves passing fabric between heated metal rollers. The specific finish depends on roller material and speed. Common types include simple, glazed, embossed, and moire calendering. The goal is to smooth, pattern, or add luster to fabrics.

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PRIYA GHOSH
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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CALENDERING

CALENDERING
• Calendering is a process of pressing or ironing
a fabric at high speed and under high
pressure.
• There are various types of calendering
machinery, each producing different types of
pressed surface.
• All calender finishes are classified as
mechanical finishing.
CALENDERING
• A calender machine is fundamentally a
mechanical device consisting of two or more,
stacked on top of each other.
• They are generally about 70 inches (178 cm)
wide and usually heated.
• They are in contact with each other under
great pressure.
CALENDERING
CALENDERING
CALENDERING
CALENDERING
• Fabric being calendered passes around and
between these cylinders and is pressed under
great pressure.
• The specific taype of calender-finished fabric
varies with the nature of the cylinder surface,
the speed of the cylinders and the nature of
the fabric being finished.
• The object of calendering is to smooth the
fabric and to create interesting surface
effects.
CALENDERING
• Calendering and related treatments are of
limited durability when applied to cellulosic
materials, but durability can be increased
when calendering is carried out in conjunction
with a chemical resin.
• The use of heated rollers makes calendering
durable on fabrics of thermoplastic fibers.
• Calendering treatments are not usually
applied to woolen or worsted fabrics.
CALENDERING-OBJECTIVES
• Smoothing the surface of the fabric.
• Increasing the fabric luster.
• Closing the threads of woven fabrics.
• Decreasing the air permeability.
• Increasing the fabric opacity.
• Improving the fabric handle.
• Flattening slubs.
• Obtaining silk like/ high gloss finish.
• Surface patterning by embossing.
SIMPLE CALENDERING

• Also called swissing or normal glossing.


• The simplest form of calendering is
comparable to ironing a fabric.
• The calender rolls are heated and the
dampened cloth is passed between the
cylinders to smooth and flatten the fabric and
give it a slightly glossy surface.
SIMPLE CALENDERING
• It is a temporary finish and the yarns in the
fabric usually return to their natural round
configuration on the first laundering or
steaming.
• The speed usually is 100 yards/min.
• The high pressure tends to flatten the yarns
and makes the fabric softer and smoother and
enhances the fabric’s luster.
GLAZED CALENDERING
• It is also called chintz or friction calendering.
• This is used to produce the high sheen of
polished cotton or chintz.
• The machine used is called a friction calender
or a chasing calender.
• One of the highly polished steel cylinders,
rotates at speeds much higher than the fabric
passing through it, thus polishing the fabric.
GLAZED CALENDERING
• Before the fabric is passed through the
calender, the cloth is saturated with either
starch or resin.
• The fabric is dried slightly and fed into the
machine.
• It starch is used to produce the glaze, the
finish is temporary.
• If resins are used, the glaze is durable.
CIRE CALENDERING
• It is a type of glazed calendering, where the
friction roller rotates at speeds much greater
than ordinary friction calendering.
• The resultant fabric becomes highly lustrous
and takes on a wet look.
• Fabrics of cotton, rayon, polyester, nylon and
blends of these may be given a cire finish.
CIRE CALENDERING
• The fabrics are treated with waxes or resins
prior to calendering, to achieve the highly
polished effect.
• When thermoplastic fabrics are cire finished,
the fabric becomes moderately water-
repellent due to the flattening and partial
fusing of fibers.
• Cire is not the name of a fabric, but fabrics
with this finish are popularly called cire fabric
or cire cloth.
EMBOSSED CALENDERING
• It produces a three-dimensional design on the
fabric.
• This is done on a special embossing calender
in which the roller cylinder is engraved with
the embossing design.
• The pattern is thus pushed or shaped into the
cloth when the fabric passes between the
rollers.
EMBOSSED CALENDERING
• Some embossed fabrics are made to imitate
more costly woven jacquard or dobby
designs.
• Embossed fabrics reveal a regular, consistent
weave (plain or twill) whereas jacquard or
dobby fabrics have yarns floats in the design
area.
• Embossed patterns of fabrics pre-treated with
resins and cured after embossing are durable.
EMBOSSED CALENDERING
• Embossing of thermoplastic fabrics is
permanent because the heated metal roll
heat-sets the design.
• Embossed designs provide surface texture at a
lower cost than do woven designs.
• Embossed fabrics should not be ironed or
pressed as the design may be diminished by
the pressure.
MOIRE CALENDERING
• A moire finish produces a watered or clouded
surface appearance that is sometimes called
“wood grain” pattern, on the face side of the
fabric.
• There are two methods for producing moire.
• In the first method, an engraved cylinder
roller on the calender, flattens one part of the
fabric more than another, causing the
difference in light reflectance.
MOIRE CALENDERING

• The second method utilizes smooth calender


rollers.
• In this method, two fabrics, each face to face,
are fed through the calender.
• Ribbed fabrics, like taffeta or faille, are
necessary for this process.
• Moire finishes may be temporary, durable or
permanent.
MOIRE CALENDERING
• The high pressure on the calender rolls causes
the ribs to squeeze into each other in certain
areas, thus flattening parts of the fabric and
creating light reflectance pattern.
• In the first method, definite repeat pattern
moire is produced.
• The second method produces a completely
random, non-repetitive moire.
MOIRE CALENDERING
MOIRE CALENDERING
SCHREINER CALENDERING
• It produces a low, soft luster on the fabric
surface.
• It is distinct from the high glaze (glassy) of the
glazing calender or the luster shine of the
simple calender.
• It is widely used on nylon tricot, cotton and
cotton-polyester sateen and damask table
linens.
SCHREINER CALENDERING
• To produce this effect, one of the steel
cylinders of the calender is embossed with
very fine diagonal lines, about 250 lines per
inch.
• These embossings are rarely visible to the
naked eye.
• In addition to soft luster, a softer hand and
improved fabric cover is obtained.
NAPPING
• Napping is a mechanical finish in which
woven or knitted fabrics are passed against
rotating, bristled, wire-covered brushes.
• This action results in fibers being raised from
the fabric surface, creating a fuzzy and soft
finish.
• Napped fabrics have a softer hand and
provide better insulation than the same
materials unnapped because they can entrap
more air.
NAPPING
• Widely used in blankets, sleepwear and
winter clothing.
• One difficulty with napped fabrics is that the
napped-fiber ends are subject to pilling and
rapid wear (abrasion).
• Napped fabrics have a deeper pile or nap on
the surface of the fabric than sueded fabrics.
NAPPING
• Fabrics are produced deliberately to be
napped and may be knitted with loose loops
on the surface for producing fleece-type
materials.
• Single napping signifies that both sides of a
cloth have been napped in one direction.
• Double napping signifies that both surfaces
have been napped in opposite directions,
which produces greater surface density,
increased firmness and greater warmth.
NAPPING
NAPPING
NAPPING
NAPPING
NAPPING
• Napping is also called brushing, raising,
gigging.
SUEDING/EMERIZING
• Also called sanding, emerizing and peach
finish.
• It develops a low pile on the surface of the
fabric, which looks and feels like suede
leather.
• The fabric is passed over a series of rollers
covered with a sandpaper-like abrasive
material.
SUEDING
• Fabric moves at a speed of 15 to 20 m/min.
• Too much abrasion or too coarse an abrasive
rips or tears the fabric.
• Too little abrasion may generate sufficient
heat to produce a harsh hand with
thermoplastic fibers.
• The process damages the fabric and can
decrease its tensile strength (up to 60%).
SUEDING
SUEDING
SUEDING
SUEDING
DECATISING
• Also called Decating.
• Produces a smooth, wrinkle-free finish and
lofty hand on woolen and worsted fabrics and
their blends.
• Comparable to steam ironing.
• The dry cloth is wound under tension on a
perforated cylinder.
• Steam is forced through the fabric.
DECATISING
• Moisture and heat relax tensions and remove
wrinkles.
• The yarns are set and fixed in this position by
cooling in cold air.
• For a more permanent set, dry decatising is
done in a pressure boiler.
• Enhances and sets the natural luster of
fabrics.
• Helps to overcome uneven or blotchy dyeing.
DECATING/DECATIZING
• The process is “full decating” if carried out
under pressure and “semi decating”
otherwise.

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