Your search for Lehenga & Sherwani fabrics ends here. Are you looking for Jacquard fabrics for making Lehengas & Sherwanis? If yes, then do watch out this video till end. Hello, this is Tushar from Charu Creation Pvt Ltd, a fashion fabric company at Nehru Place, New Delhi. Friends, our collection of Silk Jacquard, Viscose Jacquard & Polyester Jacquard Fabrics are absolutely appropriate for making Lehengas & Sherwanis. The price of these fabrics starts from Rs. 315 per meter inclusive of GST.
The width of these fabrics start from 46 inches and goes upto 58 inches. Friends, hurry as the stock is limited. Friends, to view our collection of Jacquard check out the link given in the description of the video.
Friends, I hope that products made out of our fabric collection would make your ventures profitable. For any enquiry regarding fabrics, you may call us at +91-9971106200 or email us at charu@charu.org.in. If you find this information useful, please subscribe to this Youtube channel to get more useful information. Thanks a lot.
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The jacquard loom gives the weaver a finer tuned control to interlace up to several hundred warp threads, inspiring countless possible designs. The pattern is neither embroidered nor printed but woven directly into the fabric.
The Jacquard loom was invented by a French weaver Joseph-Marie Jacquard in 1804. The original loom was controlled by a chain of punched cards laced together into a continuous sequence, with the rows of holes on each card corresponding to one row of the design.
The attachment resembles the punch card on a piano. If the punch cards with holes which create a pattern sounds a little like an early computer – it is. The Jacquard loom and its punch card pattern system is considered an important point in the history of the computer.
Babbage (the ‘Father of the Computer’)and Lovelace (world’s first computer programmer) were familiar with Jacquards loom, and Babbage intended to use punch cards based on the loom punch cards in his Analytical Engine.
Today jacquard weaves are achieved not with a Jacquard loom, but rather with a Jacquard head which is fitted on to a dobby loom. Today besides the patterning on fabrics, Jacquard looms can also be used to create elaborately patterned knits, like hose, socks and stocking with elaborate patterns woven in, sweaters and a whole lot of other patterned fabrics.
Jacquard is a special loom, or a machine employed in the weaving of a figured fabric. The fabric is woven on a Jacquard loom fitted with a head programmed to raise each warp thread independently of the other threads.
Besides being a loom, Jacquard is also referred as a fabric and as a weave. Jacquard is an intricately woven pattern. The pattern is neither embroidered nor printed but woven directly into the fabric. The motif or image on a jacquard often appears in a different color or texture than the rest of the material, but it could also be the same color.
Jacquard designs can be from the very complex to as simple as a repeating geometric pattern. In fact it would not be wrong in saying that literally anything that can be imagined could be reproduced through the jacquard. Multiple color threads can be used to create a jacquard weave, resulting in complex gradations and patterns—landscapes, portraits, and other unique motifs are possible in a jacquard.
While it takes longer to create a jacquard weave, the result is a stretchy and more stable fabric than basic weaving yields. The drape and durability of the finished jacquard ultimately depends upon the type of fibers used in the weave. Fabrics such as Brocade, Brocatelle, Damask, Piqué, Tapestry, etc. fall under the category of Jacquard fabrics as these fabrics are woven on Jacquard loom fabric.