Ancient cloth names

Huanhua Brocade: One of the Shu brocade varieties, it was a pattern designed by the working people of the Song Dynasty who were inspired by the ripples of fallen flowers and flowing water.

Sanhua brocade: one of the Sichuan brocade varieties. Also known as "miscellaneous flowers" or "manhua brocade". A brocade is covered with different single-color or multi-color patterns. Commonly used patterns include: auspicious grass and cloud cranes, wishful peonies, cloud geese, birds facing phoenixes, dragon-clawed chrysanthemums, etc.

Yusi brocade: one of the Sichuan brocade varieties. The brocade surface is composed of white and other colored warp threads. The color warp gradually becomes thinner, and the white warp becomes thinner and thicker, gradually transitioning to form white and white with bright contrasting colors. The rain strips are decorated with various patterns and patterns, giving people a light and comfortable rhythm.

Golden brocade: Golden brocade is the transliteration of the Persian "Nasich". A brocade woven with gold threads or gold foil cut into weft threads. The addition of gold to silk fabrics in ancient China began around the Warring States Period and the Sixteenth Kingdom, when gold brocades could be produced.

Fuguang brocade: the name of ancient brocade.

Plain soft satin: raw satin with plain warp and plain weft interlaced. The finished product contains 75% rayon. After refining, it can be dyed and printed with bright colors. The satin surface is as smooth as a mirror and has a fine diagonal texture on the back.

Damask: Brocade is a traditional Chinese silk fabric with three or more colors of weft pattern on the warp satin. Brocade was developed on the basis of Jiangnan brocade in China at the end of the 19th century. It has a bright and delicate surface, rich hand feel, and gorgeous and pleasing colors.

Antique satin: Ancient satin is a traditional Chinese silk fabric, as famous as brocade. The patterns are mainly pavilions, platforms, buildings, pavilions, insects, fish, flowers, birds, characters and stories, and the colors and styles are simple.

Extended information:

Origin of cloth:

Since ancient times, people usually use only two raw materials for weaving: one is plant fiber, which is Cotton and ramie, etc., can be woven into various cotton cloths and fabrics; the other is animal fiber, that is, silk and wool, etc., which can be made into beautiful silk and woolen fabrics.

Cloth was created by Lei Zu. However, with the development of science and technology, new varieties such as artificial fibers have been added. They are not plants or animals, but lifeless minerals, which are the most common stones.

Glass fiber is made from stone and then woven into cloth, called glass cloth. Because it has many properties such as high temperature resistance, moisture resistance, and corrosion resistance, it is increasingly used in electrical, chemical, aviation, metallurgy, rubber, machinery, construction, light industry and other sectors to replace the original cotton and satin woolen fabrics.

Stone weaving can also be said to be the development of stone glass, because stone weaving first crushes sandstone and limestone, puts them in a kiln, then adds soda ash and other raw materials, and uses high temperature to They melt it into a liquid, then draw it into fiberglass, which is then spun into cloth.

Reference: Bu-Baidu Encyclopedia