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May 28, 2010

How Pantyhose are Made

Article from http://www.madehow.com/Volume-1/Pantyhose.html


Pantyhose are a form of sheer women's hosiery that extend from the waist to the toes. The terms hosiery and stocking derive from the Anglo-Saxon words hosa, meaning "tight-legged trouser," and stoka, meaning "stump" When the upper part of a trouser leg was cut off, the remaining stoka became "stocking," and hosa became "hosiery." For centuries, sheer stockings and hose were worn as separate leg and foot coverings. However, after World War II, fashion designers began to attach panties to stockings, creating the form of hosiery currently favored by most women. Although their most basic purpose is to protect and beautify the feet and legs of female consumers, nylons are also put to other uses, including supporting the legs of football players and protecting crops from dust storms. Pantyhose have even been recycled in the arts and crafts industry, where they are cut up and stuffed with fiberfill to become the arms and legs of dolls and stuffed animals.

Few early references to women's hosiery exist because any public mention of women's legs was considered improper until the twentieth century. The first extant discussion of a garment resembling today's pantyhose concerns the "tight-fitting hose" young Venetian men wore beneath short jackets during the fourteenth century. Made of silk, these leggings were often brightly colored and embroidered; older Venetians considered them extremely immodest. One of the earliest mentions of women wearing stockings appears in the records of Queen Elizabeth I, whose "silk woman" presented her with a pair of knitted black silk stockings. Admiring their softness and comfort, the Queen requested more, and wore only silk stockings for the rest of her life.

In 1589, when the Reverend William Lee attempted to patent the first knitting machine, Queen Elizabeth denied his request because, she contended, the coarse stockings produced by Lee's machine were inferior to the silk hose she had shipped from Spain. Lee improved his machine, enabling it to manufacture softer stockings, but Elizabeth's successor, James I, denied his second patent application as well, this time out of fear that the machine would endanger the livelihood of English hand knitters. After Lee's death, his brother built a framework knitting machine that remained unrivalled for several hundred years.

When William Cotton invented the first automated knitting machine in 1864, he incorporated the key features of Lee's design, notably the spring-beard needle that is still used in many contemporary knitting machines. Named for the fine, open hook that projects from the needle at an angle like that of the hair in a man's beard, the spring-beard needle must be used with a pressing device to close the hook as it forms a loop. This type of needle is ideal for hosiery because it produces smaller loops and, consequently, a finer weave. Cotton's straight-bar machine created flat sheets of fabric using a weft stitch whereby a continuous yarn was fed to needles that sewed back-and-forth horizontal rows. By increasing or reducing the number of needles used to knit different portions of a stocking, workers could vary the thickness of the garment: more needles produced thicker fabric. Stitching began at the top of the stocking with a welt, or thick strip to which women could attach garters. To accommodate



Nylon is made in a process known as "melt spinning." First, a syrupy polymer solution is produced and then extruded through a spinneret. As the nylon strings emerge, they are cooled by air and stretched over rollers to stabilize the molecular chains and strengthen the fibers. The yarn is then wound on spools.



Next, the yarn is fed into a computer-controlled circular knitting machine, which uses its 300 to 420 needles to convert the nylon into a series of loops. It takes about 90 seconds to knit a full-length stocking leg.

the feet and ankles, the stocking fabric was thinned at the bottom, although the fabric at the heel remained thick, for cushioning purposes. After it was removed from Cotton's machine, the fabric was manually shaped and seamed up the back to produce so-called full-fashioned stockings.



Also produced during the mid-nineteenth century, the first seamless stockings were made on circular machines that knitted tubes of fabric to which separate foot and toe pieces were subsequently attached. Although these stockings were more attractive in that they featured no visible seams, they bagged at the knees and ankles because circular machines could not add or drop stitches like the Lee and Cotton machines. It was not until the World War II era that two developments made possible better-fitting stockings. First, circular machines were improved so that they could knit stockings in one piece. Still more significant was the DuPont Company's invention of a synthetic fiber called nylon. After being sewn into a tube, nylon fabric could be heated and formed into a shape that it would thereafter retain through numerous stretchings and washings. Hosiery made from this revolutionary fabric was introduced to the general population in 1940, and its immediate popularity soon rendered the word "nylons" synonymous with hosiery.

However, the war that had accelerated the development of nylon also increased the demand for it, so, during the early forties, the hosiery industry offered socks instead of stockings. The anklet, a short cotton sock, became the temporary replacement favored by most women, particularly the young consumers known as "bobby-soxers." Yet, when the war ended and nylon was once again available for consumer uses, most women returned to nylon stockings. During the sixties, decreasing skirt lengths necessitated longer stockings, and fashion designers created what we now know as pantyhose by attaching panties to hosiery. In addition to accommodating all hemline fluctuations, pantyhose don't need to be held up with the garters and garter belts previously used to secure stockings. Nylons have become a fashion accessory that few women are willing to do without. This is especially true in the white-collar workforce, where they are considered an essential part of appropriate office attire.

Raw Materials

Pantyhose are generally made from a nylon-based blend of synthetic fibers. The nylon most commonly used—Nylon 6,6—is made from adipic acid, an organic acid, and hexamethylene diamine, an organic base, which are chemically combined to form a nylon salt. Because nylon is a plastic material—actually the first thermoplastic fiber ever used—the salt must undergo polymerization. In this process, different molecules are combined to form longer molecular chains. These chains result in a smooth, thick substance that is then cut into small shapes or pellets, before being spun into yarn. The nylon fiber's size, strength, weight, elasticity, and luster are determined during its preparation by controlling the number and type of filaments used. For example, luster is produced by adding titanium dioxide (TiO 2 ). The resulting fiber is highly elastic and retains its shape after repeated washings and stretchings. Its resistance to wrinkles and creases, its durability, and the fact that it dries quickly make it a desirable fabric for busy women.

Today, filaments of another synthetic fiber, spandex, are frequently combined with nylon filaments to increase elasticity and achieve a snugger fit. More recently, other new fibers known as microfibers or microdeniers have been blended with nylon. A denier is a unit of measure that indicates the thickness of nylon yarn. The denier scale ranges from 7 to 80 denier, with smaller numbers indicating finer yarn and higher numbers denoting heavier yarn that will be used to make stronger fabrics. When blended with nylon, microdeniers enhance softness, hold color more evenly, and provide a better fit.

Design

Pantyhose are usually classified as sheer, semisheer, or service weight, with the weight determined by the denier and the number of needles used during production. Although stockings do not differ in shape, fashion designers will vary the color, texture and pattern of their hosiery. Much as the fashion industry offers different types of clothing appropriate for specific functions and occasions, it designs hosiery tailored to particular purposes. For example, heavier knit and natural colored pantyhose are considered more practical for daytime and office wear while sheer hosiery is saved for evening affairs and special occasions. Similarly, darker nylons are generally found on retail shelves during the winter, while paler shades are displayed in the spring and summer. In addition, some designers offer hose with extra elastic sewn in to the midriff to serve as "tummy control"; still others produce nylons with lightweight girdles instead of panties. Because nylon does not "breathe" well, some manufacturers offer hosiery with cotton crotch panels, and both toes and heels can be reinforced to deter runs.

The Manufacturing Process

Making nylon yarn

•1 Nylon yarn is made in a process known as melt spinning. First, the chemicals involved—adipic acid and hexamethylene diamine—must be polymerized to form a thick resin that is then cut into chips or pellets. These pellets are then heated and pressurized in an autoclave into a syrupy solution. Next, the solution is extruded through a spinneret—a device that looks and works like a shower head, with long strings of nylon solution coming out of the holes in the device. The number of holes depends on the type of yarn desired: one hole produces monofilament yarn, which is very thin and sheer; several holes produce multifilament yarn, which is denser and less sheer. As the fibers emerge from the spinneret, they are cooled by air and then stretched over rollers to stabilize the molecular chains and strengthen the fibers. The yarn is then wound on spools.
After the legs are seamed together and the toe openings closed, the pantyhose garments are immersed in a dyeing machine. A modern dye machine can color about 3,500 dozen pairs of hose a day. After drying and boarding—steaming the hose to the proper shape—the garments are ready for packaging.

Knitting

•2 Yarn is fed into a circular knitting machine, which converts it into a series of loops. Usually computer-controlled, the machine contains 300 to 420 needles and rotates at speeds up to 1,200 RPM; it takes about 90 seconds to knit a full-length stocking leg.

Seaming

•3 Next, openings at the toes are seamed together, and two stocking legs are seamed together to form pantyhose. Sometimes they are seamed together with a crotch. Like the other steps in pantyhose manufacture, seaming is almost completely automated.

Dyeing and drying

•4 The sewn product then goes to a dye machine where it will be dyed to one of more than 100 different shades. The dye machine can color about 3,500 dozen pairs a day. Once dyed, the pantyhose are taken to a compartment dryer which dries them.

Boarding

•5 This next step, boarding, is sometimes done before the dyeing process, depending on the desired final product. Boarding is the process of placing the pantyhose over leg forms where they are steamed and heated to the desired shape. With less expensive hosiery, this step may be completely bypassed and the pantyhose packaged in their relaxed state.

Inspecting

•6 Throughout the manufacturing process, quality checks are performed on the pantyhose. A statistical method is used for inspection.

Packaging

•7 Pantyhose that meet the inspection guidelines are packaged in a box or paperboard envelope, either manually or automatically.

Filling orders: Picking and shipping

•8 After they leave the manufacturing plant, the pantyhose are stored in warehouses and organized according to size, style, and color for efficient order-filling. Customer orders are filled by personnel at various "picking" stations positioned alongside a conveyor belt that carries the filled cases to a staging area for final shipping to retail markets.

By products/Waste

The hosiery industry must confront the problems all textile mills face in producing a fabric. In particular, hosiery mills must treat the wastewater generated during the dyeing phase to prevent contamination. Many of the dyes used to tint pantyhose contain toxic substances such as ammonium sulfate. To minimize harmful wastewater, manufacturers must adhere to guidelines set by the U.S. government's Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). Treating the water before it is dumped into rivers has alleviated some of the wastewater concerns. Another approach has been to control the amounts of various chemicals used during the manufacturing process. Failure to measure chemicals properly can create an over-abundance of some of the materials, thereby causing harmful waste. A third idea has been to substitute less harmful chemicals when possible.

The Future

The hosiery industry currently produces almost 2 billion pairs of women's sheer hose annually. Industry analysts predict that consumers will continue to demand high-quality nylons in a variety of shades, styles, and degrees of sheerness. Manufacturers will strive to meet the consumer's need by experimenting with hybrid fabrics that combine synthetic fibers with natural fibers such as cotton.

Read more: How pantyhose is made - material, manufacture, making, history, used, steps, product, industry, machine, Raw Materials, Design, The Manufacturing Process of pantyhose http://www.madehow.com/Volume-1/Pantyhose.html#ixzz0pHigSNhP

May 24, 2010

Hooters Pantyhose Are Not Just For Hooters Girls!

Tamara Pantyhose are Made to Hooters Uniform Specifications and are available at Hooters Locations for the employees. There are Two Divisions of the Hooters Company, much like General Motors has the divisions of Chevrolet and Cadillac. One division of the Hooters Company is Hooters Inc. while the other division is Hooters of America, LLC (H.O.A., LLC). Both have employee uniform guidelines. Part of the Hooters Girl uniform requirement is wearing a certain type of pantyhose that will accent and improve the appearance of a girl's legs as well as help with any blemishes. Hooters also has a durability requirement for the hosiery manufactured for the Hooters Girl Uniform. There are Two brands of pantyhose specifically manufactured for the purpose of Hooters Uniforms but only Tamara meets all of the current NEW requirements for the New low rise shorts and crop tops of the 2009 uniform. The Hooters Casino in Las Vegas has a classic Hooters restaurant inside. The Hooters Casino also utilizes Tamara light support pantyhose and Tamara fishnet pantyhose as well as some other styles of tights.



Tamara Pantyhose are a required Hooters Server Uniform Component and are manufactured to meet Hooters Uniform Requirements. The colors are designed darker and are required for Hooters INC. Uniforms (also acceptable for Hooters H.O.A.). Other companies and businesses choose this same Tamara pantyhose and hosiery as well. The facts are that girls are sporting Tamara® Hosiery Products as a component of the famous Show Me’s® as well as Hooters® Casino and restaurant uniforms along with Hooters® Calendar Girl photo shoots. Tamara pantyhose are also great for Ice Skating, Dancing, Stage, Dates, Modeling, Art, and Photography because of the gloss and durability factors.

Tamara Hosiery is also worn by flight attendants, NFL Cheerleaders and many professional photography studios also provide their models with Tamara Hosiery because it provides a nice high shine and they are durable and are made to last.








Hooters pantyhose and scrunchie socks are sold at www.SupremeLegwear.com

May 23, 2010

Finding the Best Prices for Pantyhose and Tights - Falke

As online hosiery sales continue to climb year after year, shoppers have more and more stores to choose from when making their hosiery purchases. Most shoppers are also looking for the best prices and some debate if price shopping is worth the extra time and effort to save a little money. After doing some research on pricing, I decided to compare prices between several stores to see how SupremeLegwear.com stacks up against some popular stores. After doing several google searches on Falke pantyhose, tights, stockings, and hosiery, many familiar stores always seem to be on the first page. BareNecessities, Her Room, and My Tights. Falke is a premium quality brand of hosiery and it is in the high end price range for hosiery products.

Click on the chart below to see my price findings on the Falke line of hosiery between these stores.


Shopping around for pricing certainly was well worth the extra time in this particular case. So if you love wearing a premium hosiery brand like Falke, it makes sense to stop by www.SupremeLegwear.com and save some money!

May 22, 2010

Celebrities in Falke Tights



There are many celebrities who often are seen wearing Luxury hosiery.
Here is Wendy Williams wearing Falke Tights.





Here is Nicki Minaj looking stunning in some Falke Tights

Damien Scott; Photography by Cameron Krone
MORE CREDITS: (STYLIST) KAREEM JAMES; (HAIR) SABRINA ROWE; (MAKEUP) JAVIER ROMERO FOR M.A.C. COSMETICS; (CLOTHING) SUNGLASSES BY THEO; BODYSUIT BY WOLFORD; BELT BY NASIAKI MALANO; TIGHTS BY FALKE; SHOES BY ALEJANDRO INGELMO



Falke is a leading luxury clothing company that offers some of the most beautiful and comfortable hosiery ever made. Some of Falke's most popular hosiery items are;

Seidenglatt 15 Transparent Shining Tights
Seidenglatt 70 Transparent Shining Tights
Pure Matt 20 Transparent Tights
Pure Matt 50 Semi Opaque Tights
Seidenglatt 15 Transparent Stockings
Seidenglatt 15 Transparent Stay Ups



If you ultimately prefer the traditional nude pantyhose, skip the cheap and invest in high-quality pairs from brands like Oroblu, Cette, Falke or Wolford.


May 16, 2010

Falke Seidenglatt 15 Transparent Shining Pantyhose 40493 - Luxury at its Best!



Falke Seidenglatt 15 Transparent Shining Tights are transparent sheer tights that give your legs a smooth, elegant lustre. They feature an elegant, height-adjustable waistband that is perfect for low-cut styles. With a Seductive mother-of-pearl sheen and a Height-adjustable waistband, these pantyhose are super comfortable and add a nice shimmer to show off your legs.



Falke is a premier international clothing and lifestyle brand and legwear market leader. The Falke style is the perfect combination of technically superior products with the best of contemporary fashion - an approach that inspires feelings of 'zeitgeist' or enjoyment for life.


These fabulous pantyhose can be found at Supreme Legwear for $23.00 with FREE Shipping!