Presentation On Cronological Depelopment of Loom Tee - 410 Project - 1.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Industrial Revolution Begins
Advertisements

Woven Pouches.
The Industrial Revolution
Classification of a Complete Design for a Woven Fabric
Single Cloth Construction Chapter One General Knowledge On Woven Fabric.
Industrial Revolution: Textiles By: Joshua Almonte, Caroline Parks, and Victoria Scalanga Pd. 2.
Intro. To Fiber Arts Fiber, Yarn, Fabrics.
Introduction (1) Weaving Principle & Shuttle loom
1 Fundamental Operations in Weaving Dr Jimmy Lam Institute of Textiles & Clothing.
Chapter Nine Gauze and Leno Weaves
Weaving Loom Parts. 1. Wood frame The wood frame is the skeleton of the loom and holds all the components together.
Britain Leads the Way Chapter 20 Section 2
Industrial Revolution. Key Terms Flying Shuttle- was one of the key developments in the industrialization of weaving. It allowed a single weaver to weave.
Chapter Ten Jacquard Fabrics 10.1 Elements of Jacquard Shedding 10.2 Preparation for Designing the Jacquard Fabrics 10.3 Steps in construction of Jacquard.
Textile Industry: the First Example of Industrialization Objective: Scientific and technological changes promoted industrialization in the textile industry.
Introduction (2) Weaving machines: Shuttleless looms
EQ: How did the Industrial Revolution begin in Europe? Key Terms: Agricultural Revolution, enclosure, cottage industry, textiles, factory system.
Er . Bhushan Kumar Shedding Mechanism …..
Textiles Jessie Weiss Conor Riegel Griffin Dunn Mike Leuzzi.
The Industrial Revolution The Industrial Revolution is the period from Machines replaced the work of manual labor and increased production.
1750 AD – 1840 AD in England 1800s-1900s in France and Germany 1840s -1920s in United States.
Industrial Revolution. Causes Agricultural Revolution(Early 1700s) Improved Fertilizers (e.g., mixing lime and clay into soil) Growing turnips to feed.
What comes to mind when you hear “apparel/textile industry”? Do we have Apparel/Textile Industries in our town, county, state? Still Standing start at.
 Fahion Style Quiz Fahion Style Quiz Fahion Style Quiz  Fashion Style Quiz for Men Fashion Style Quiz for Men Fashion Style Quiz for Men Chic Fashionista.
TEXTILES!!!! BY: CONNOR LAWLER, KANELLA EBY, ISABELLA GLADESTONE, TYLER MAGGI, PATRICK MCANDREWS, SARAH WEISS.
The Industrial Revolution in America
Industrial Revolution
Anticipation, Aesthetics, and Innovation. Loom, Kinetoscope, Piano ATEC Xiaowen Wang.
The North Chapter 11.
{ World History Chapter 12- The Industrial Revolution Section 2- The Beginnings of Change.
The Industrial Revolution
By Polina, Christian, Chris, Mary & Rebecca Textiles.
Working Conditions The machines were exposed and dangerous Children worked in hard to reach places-dangerous Often lived with 6 people in one room Not.
Technologies and inventions By: Kyle Anderson. When his invention was used, a larger share of the seed germinated. As a result, crop yields increased.
Zachary M. Walker EDSC 304 – Intersession 2014 This all happened hundreds of years ago, right? It can’t possibly still be important? Actually it is!
Textiles Kelly, Ryan, Ashley, and Dayoung Period 2.
Industrial Revolution Shawn Roe. Question slide What factor led to the Industrial Revolution?
The Beginnings of Industrialization
MACHINERY IN THE TEXTILE INDUSTRY
Chapter 9 Section 1.  Upon completion, students should be able to: 1. Explain the causes of the Industrial Revolution 2. Describe the new inventions.
Slide 1 Introduction to the Industrial Revolution.
Industrial Revolution Begins. Revolution in Great Britain  1700s = change in _____________________  energy source changed from ____________& ________.
Changes in the Textile Industry.
Fiber Art WeAVING.
The Industrial Revolution
The textile industry was an important part of the industrial Revolution, and it helped make Great Britain into a rich and powerful country. Textiles are.
Weaving A textile or fiber art.
DO NOW: ENGLAND Answer the following question: List reasons why industrialization began in England (write as many as you can!)
Textiles Liam Garcia, Yoon Kim, Justin Jeong, Farquleet Dagtagir, Emily Chatterton.
Setting the Scene Visitors crowded into London's Crystal Palace in The immense structure housed the Great Exhibition, a display of the "Works of.
Agricultural Revolution
February 25 Homework: Read through this Powerpoint and Homework: Read through this Powerpoint and write one concept YOU clearly understand or remember.
THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION ( ) A change in the way goods are produced.
The Industrial Revolution... The shift from an agrarian, hand-made, labor-intensive economy to a machine-made, labor-specialization economy.
Britain leads the Way Industrial Revolution. Why Britain? Resources New Technology Economic Conditions Political and Social Conditions.
INNOVATIONS OF INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION Section 2. TEXTILE INDUSTRY  In the late 1700s the manufacturing of cloth transformed Britain  Population boom.
History of the Textile Industry. The textile industry in the 19 th Century The beginning of textile production go back to the stone age. The early process.
India’s Textiles.
WEAVING KNITTING FELTING
The Beginnings of Industrialization
Industrial Revolution Apparel & Textile Production Objective 1.01A
The Industrial Revolution...
Industrial Revolution, c
Intermission: encoding data
Do Now Innovation: The action of inventing something, typically a process (method) or device (machine). Thinking about history since the beginning of.
Age of Industrial Revolution
The Industrial Revolution
The Industrial Revolution
Presentation transcript:

Presentation On Cronological Depelopment of Loom Tee - 410 Project - 1

Introductory Chronological development means step by step development, so chronological development of loom means the day by day or step by step development of loom. That mean the development of loom from invention to now. The chronological development of loom is given below as a flow chart & the details discussion also.

The chronological development of loom is given next as a flow chart & the details will also be discussed.

Chronological development of Loom Primitive or vertical loom Pit loom Frame loom Chittaranjan loom Haatersely loom Ordinary power loom Automatic power loom Modern loom Fly Shuttle 2. Throw Shuttle Semi automatic shuttle Automatic loom 1. Projecttile 2. Rapier 3. Airjet 4. Water jet

Vertical Loom This loom is invented on Ancient Greek at 1900 B.C. This is the most conventional loom in weaving history. Before this there was weaving process but those process was not recorded & all of them r done by hand process. In this loom warp threads r vertically arranged from a horizontally attached bar & the shead is done by sheding rod & shed is changed by heedle rod & pickiking & beat-up is done by manually by weft bobbin & showrd. This the mechanism of Vertical loom.This style of loom is still used by the Navajo Indians, who picked up weaving from the Pueblo Indians far before the arrival of the Spaniards.

Pit Loom This loom is invented in 1766 B.C. in Egypt.The weaver sits with his or her legs in the pit where there are two pedals which open the warp threads allowing the weft shuttle to pass through freely.This type of loom leaves the weavers' hands free to pass the weft shuttle through from side to side and to compress the weaving as they go. For this reason this type of loom also called throw shuttle loom.

Frame Loom Frame loom is also invented with pit loom. In this loom all weaving process is done within a frame that’s why it called frame loom. At first all the process is done by manually but with the development of technology all things are developed. This kind of loom use to make short length of fabric now-a-days.

Throw Shuttle Throw shuttle is that kind of shuttle which is passing between the shed by throwing with human from one side to another side. It was the most conventional or first types of shuttle used from the beginning of weaving.

Flying Shuttle The flying shuttle was invented by John Kay, an Englishman, in 1733 Kay invented a shuttle that was mechanically thrown. The weaver never touches the shuttle except to change the bobbin. This invention greatly sped up the weaving process and made it possible to weave much wider cloths.

Chittaranjan Loom This loom is invented at 1734 in India. It was the simplest loom but the beginning time of modern loom after invention of this loom we develop the loom rapidly.

Hattersley Loom Geo. Hattersley was a textile machinery manufacturer from Keighley, West Yorkshire in England, founded in 1789 and responsible for the Hattersley Standard Loom and other types of loom. Hattersley Dobby Loom In 1867 George Hattersley and Sons created a loom with a dobby head. A dobby a mechanical heald lifting device which allowed weaving of much more intricate patterns on any looms to which it was fitted.

Hattersley Loom Hattersley Narrow Fabric Loom In 1908 Hattersley developed the world's first smallware (or narrow fabric) loom, these were suitable for weaving wicks for oil lamps, and the webbing that is used in the automotive industry. In 1919. Hattersley Domestic Loom. Which is mostly used for small domestic production. Hattersley Standard Loom In 1921 the Hattersley Standard Loom, designed and built by the company.

Ordinary Power Loom A power loom is a mechanised loom powered by a line shaft. The first power loom was designed in 1784 by Edmund Cartwright and first built in 1785. It was refined over the next 47 years until a design by Kenworthy and `Bullough , made the operation completely automatic. This was known as the Lancashire Loom.

Automatic Power Loom In 1820, Roberts completed the power loom, which became the basic model for modern looms thereafter In 1858, the Satsuma domain imported water powered looms from England in order to weave sail cloth In 1892, Shigejiro Matsuda perfected the foot operated loom. Four years later in 1896, Sakichi Toyoda invented Japan's first power loom called "the Toyoda Steam power loom". Automation continued to progress with the use of broken pick automatic stop units 1924, a series of improvements produced a revolutionary loom.

This was the continuous automatic shuttle change loom (model G automatic loom) invented by Sakichi Toyoda, which was the first of its kind in the world. This loom could automatically change the shuttle while operating at high speed without slowing down and had a unit for supplying the weft. After the Second World War Japan faced a serious labor shortage (1940-1950) more development pwriod of automatic power loom.

Modern Loom After the 1960s, the goal of automatic loom manufacturers was to increase the speed of weft inserting and to reduce noise. Then a shuttle-less loom that does not use a shuttle was developed to replace the conventional shuttle loom. Methods of holding the yarn, such as the rapier loom and the projectile loom, spread rapidly. Then domestic water jet looms and air jet looms that use water or air to transport the yarn during weft insertion were produced domestically.

Modern Loom

Jacquard Loom Invention: jacquard loom invented in 1801. Inventor: joseph marie jacquard Definition: jacquard loom mechanism is controlled by recorder patterns of holes in a string of cards, and allows, what is now known as the jacquard weaving of intricate patterns. Patent: The french government claimed the loom to be public property.

Write Your Comments Here. Conclution Write Your Comments Here.

Thank You