Textile Arts

Group: 4 #group-4

Relations

  • Knitting: Knitting is a textile art that involves creating fabric by interlocking loops of yarn or thread.
  • Fiber Art: Fiber art is a broad term that encompasses various textile arts and techniques using natural or synthetic fibers.
  • Textile: Textile arts refer to the artistic and cultural practices of creating textiles, such as weaving, embroidery, and tapestry.
  • Weaving: Weaving is a form of textile arts, involving the interlacing of threads or yarns to create fabric or cloth.
  • Dyeing: Dyeing is the process of adding color to textile materials, an essential part of many textile arts.
  • Felting: Felting is a textile art that involves matting, condensing, and pressing fibers together to create a dense, non-woven fabric.
  • Embroidery: Embroidery is considered one of the textile arts, which involve working with fibers and fabrics.
  • Sewing: Sewing is considered one of the textile arts, which are crafts that involve working with fabrics and fibers.
  • Crochet: Crochet is a textile art that involves creating fabric by interlocking loops of yarn or thread with a hook.
  • Textile Printing: Textile printing involves transferring designs and patterns onto fabric using various printing techniques.
  • Lacemaking: Lacemaking is a textile art that involves creating intricate openwork patterns by interlacing threads.
  • Textile Recycling: Textile recycling involves repurposing or breaking down used textiles for reuse in new products.
  • Textile Sustainability: Textile sustainability focuses on environmentally friendly and ethical practices in the production, use, and disposal of textiles.
  • Embroidery: Embroidery is a decorative textile art that involves stitching designs onto fabric.
  • Textile Conservation: Textile conservation involves preserving and restoring historic and culturally significant textiles.
  • Weaving: Weaving is a fundamental textile art involving interlacing threads or yarns to create fabrics.
  • Textile Engineering: Textile engineering involves the application of scientific and engineering principles to the design and production of textiles.
  • Basketry: Basketry is a textile art that involves weaving rigid materials, such as reed or willow, to create containers or decorative objects.
  • Tapestry: Tapestry is a textile art that involves weaving colored weft threads to create intricate designs and images.
  • Needlework: Needlework is a form of textile arts involving decorative or functional work with fabric or yarn.
  • Sewing: Sewing is a textile art that involves joining fabrics together using needle and thread.
  • Textile History: Textile history is the study of the development and cultural significance of textile arts throughout human history.
  • Quilting: Quilting is a textile art that involves sewing together layers of fabric and batting to create a warm, insulated material.
  • Fabric: Textile arts encompass various artistic practices involving fabric and textiles
  • Loom: Weaving on a loom is considered one of the textile arts.
  • Textile Design: Textile design involves creating patterns, colors, and textures for woven, knitted, or printed fabrics.