Business PME is a gate of free information bound for the companies in the United States of America. This website offers thousands of contents as well as a companies directory.
The group’s other BtoB websites
-- Professional Networking
Tursday 9th 2010
SearchStraw manufacture | ||
Straw (from strew, as being used for strewing), is the general term applied to the stalky residue of grain-plants (especially wheat, rye, oats, barley). It forms the raw material of some important industries. It serves for the thatching of roofs, for a paper-making material, for ornamenting small surfaces as a " straw-mosaic," for plaiting into door and table mats, mattresses and for weaving and plaiting into light baskets, artificial flowers. These applications, however, are insignificant in comparison with the place occupied by straw as a raw material for the straw bonnets and hats worn by both sexes. Of the various materials which go to the fabrication of plaited head-gear the most important is wheaten straw. It is only in certain areas that straw suitable for making plaits is produced. The straw must have a certain length of " pipe " between the knots, must possess a clear delicate golden color and must not be brittle. The most valuable straw for plaits is grown in The wheat-seed for these straws is sown very thickly on comparatively elevated and arid land, and it sends up long attenuated stalks. When the grain in the ear is about half developed the straw is pulled up by the roots, dried in the sun, and subsequently spread out for several successive days to be bleached under the influence of alternate sunlight and night-dews. The pipe of the upper joint alone is selected for plaiting, the remainder of the straw being used for other purposes.
These pipes are made up in small bundles, bleached in sulphur fumes in a closed chest; assorted into sizes, and so prepared for the plaiters. Straw-plaiting is a domestic industry among the women and young children of In EnglandThe districts around The plaiters work up the material in a damp state, either into whole straw or split straw plaits. ConclusionMany substances besides straw are worked into plaits and braids for bonnets. Among these may be noticed thin strips of willow and cane and the fronds of numerous palms. Brazilian hats made from the fronds of the palmetto palms, Sabal palmetto and South mexicana, are now largely made at Copyright 2008 - France BtoB from Wikipédia
|
• Glass container industry
• Philip Green • History of Lean manufacturing – Henry &hellip • Diamond turning • Industry-specific interpretations • Innovation in organizations • The tertiary sector of industry | |