Main.DawnsNonwoven History

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March 16, 2010, at 08:11 PM by dawn -
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http://web.mit.edu/dawn/www/MAS962/nonwoven/done.jpg

March 16, 2010, at 08:11 PM by dawn -
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However, as a textile, these "open" samples were very interesting because they allow for large components while still giving the illusion of airiness.

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However, as a textile, these "open" samples were very interesting because they allow for large components while still giving the illusion of airiness.

March 16, 2010, at 08:10 PM by dawn -
Changed line 16 from:

However, as a textile, these "open" samples were very interesting because they allow for large components while still giving the illusion of airiness.

to:

However, as a textile, these "open" samples were very interesting because they allow for large components while still giving the illusion of airiness.

March 16, 2010, at 08:10 PM by dawn -
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For the assignment to make a nonwoven textile, I decided to investigate what is the minimum necessary to make an object that people consider a textile. I cut square pieces of felt about 1"x1" and spaced them evenly apart. I made four samples, each with different spacing. I ironed them with the water-soluable interfacing to hold the spacing.

to:

For the assignment to make a nonwoven textile, I decided to investigate what is the minimum necessary to make an object that people consider a textile. I cut square pieces of felt about 1"x1". I made four samples, each with different spacing of the felt squares. I ironed each sample with the water-soluable interfacing to hold the spacing.

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I used warm sink water to dissolve the interfacing. The pieces that were left varied greatly in flexibility and perceived connectivity. As soon as the spacing was on the order of the pieces, they felt disjointed, disconnected, more like individuals than a fabric. A user notices the spaces, not the felt.

to:

I dissolved the interfacing with warm sink water. The pieces that were left varied greatly in flexibility and perceived connectivity. As soon as the spacing was on the order of the pieces or larger, the felt pieces felt disjointed, disconnected, more like individuals than a fabric. A user notices the spaces, not the felt. The thread was too small, almost too "weak-looking" to keep the cohesiveness together.

However, as a textile, these "open" samples were very interesting because they allow for large components while still giving the illusion of airiness.

March 16, 2010, at 08:06 PM by dawn -
Changed lines 6-7 from:

For the assignment to make a nonwoven textile, I decided to investigate what is the minimum necessary to make an object that people consider a textile. I cut square pieces of felt about 1"x1" and spaced then evenly apart. I made four samples, each with different spacing. I ironed them with the water-soluable interfacing to hold the spacing.

to:

For the assignment to make a nonwoven textile, I decided to investigate what is the minimum necessary to make an object that people consider a textile. I cut square pieces of felt about 1"x1" and spaced them evenly apart. I made four samples, each with different spacing. I ironed them with the water-soluable interfacing to hold the spacing.

Changed line 14 from:

I used warm sink water to dissolve the interfacing. The pieces that were left varied greatly in flexibility and perceived connectivity. As soon as the spacing was on the order of the pieces, they felt disjointed, disconnected, more like individuals than a fabric. A user notices the spaces, not the felt.

to:

I used warm sink water to dissolve the interfacing. The pieces that were left varied greatly in flexibility and perceived connectivity. As soon as the spacing was on the order of the pieces, they felt disjointed, disconnected, more like individuals than a fabric. A user notices the spaces, not the felt.

March 16, 2010, at 08:05 PM by dawn -
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http://web.mit.edu/dawn/www/MAS962/nonwoven/iron.jpg

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http://web.mit.edu/dawn/www/MAS962/nonwoven/iron.jpg

Then I used the sewing machine to sew horizontally, vertically, and diagonally through the felt squares.

http://web.mit.edu/dawn/www/MAS962/nonwoven/sewed.jpg

I used warm sink water to dissolve the interfacing. The pieces that were left varied greatly in flexibility and perceived connectivity. As soon as the spacing was on the order of the pieces, they felt disjointed, disconnected, more like individuals than a fabric. A user notices the spaces, not the felt.

March 16, 2010, at 08:02 PM by dawn -
Changed lines 6-8 from:

For the assignment to make a nonwoven textile, I decided to investigate

to:

For the assignment to make a nonwoven textile, I decided to investigate what is the minimum necessary to make an object that people consider a textile. I cut square pieces of felt about 1"x1" and spaced then evenly apart. I made four samples, each with different spacing. I ironed them with the water-soluable interfacing to hold the spacing.

http://web.mit.edu/dawn/www/MAS962/nonwoven/iron.jpg

March 16, 2010, at 07:59 PM by dawn -
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Dawn's Nonwoven Assignment: Minima

Due March 17, 2010

http://web.mit.edu/dawn/www/MAS962/nonwoven/done.jpg

For the assignment to make a nonwoven textile, I decided to investigate