Color: Pink
Description: Stretch Cotton 8W Corduroy in Solid Dyed
Composition: 98%Cotton2%Spandex
Specification: 140*51/12s*16s+70D
Weight: 300~310GSM
Width: 57/58" Cuttable Width: 56"
Running colors with available yardages NO. #JX4-2021- :

-For dye to color
Labdips leadtime: 3~5days
Bulk production leadtime: 20~25days after labdips approved and order confirmed
-For printed order:
Strike off leadtime for all over print: 10~12Days
Bulk production leadtime for all over Print: 30~35days after strike off approved and order confirmed
-3rd Party Testing: not included in unit price unless Supertex was advised in advance.
More about Corduroy fabric
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Fabric also known as
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Corded velveteen, Manchester cloth, elephant cord, pincord
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Fabric composition
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Cotton, cotton-poly blend, wool, or fully synthetic
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Fabric possible wale variations
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1.5 to 29
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Fabric breathability
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Medium
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Moisture-wicking abilities
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Medium
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Heat retention abilities
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Depends on the material used
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Stretchability (give)
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Low if without spandex yarn
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Prone to pilling/bubbling
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Depends on the material used
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Recommended washing temperatures
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Depends on the material used
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Commonly used in
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Pants, overalls, jackets, uniforms, shirts, dresses, pillows, upholstery
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What is corduroy fabric?
Corduroy is a durable, ridged fabric that textile producers can make with a variety of different materials. This fabric is most notable for its unique ridged pattern, which corduroy producers can weave in a variety of widths.
While it is usually made with cotton, corduroy can also be woven with blends of polyester and cotton or even full polyester. Sometimes it could also be made with wool, but the ridges present on wool corduroy are not as visible as the ridges on corduroy made with other materials. Corduroy could be dyed in a wide variety of different colors, and one form of corduroy dying results in an uneven fading that is highly aesthetically pleasing, namely as frosted corduroy.
Corduroy consists of three separate yarns woven together. The two primary yarns create a plain or a twill weave, and the third yarn intersperses into this weave in the filling direction, forming floats that pass over at least four warp yarns. Then use blades to sever the float yarns, which causes ridges of piled fabric to appear on the surface of the weave. The ridges of piled yarn on corduroy fabric are known as wales, and these wales vary significantly in width. A piece of corduroy fabric’s “wale number” is determined by the number of wales contained in a single inch of fabric, and standard corduroy fabric has around 11-12 wales. The lower the wale number, the thicker the wales on corduroy fabric will be. Concurrently, higher wale numbers indicate thinner wales that are more closely bunched together.
How is corduroy fabric used?