Shima Seiki
Texworld Paris

Free membership

Receive our weekly Newsletter
and set tailored daily news alerts.

Warp Knitting/​Crochet

First warp knitted fabrics with seersucker effect

The fabrics look cool, Karl Mayer says, and can be worn without breaking into a sweat, thanks to slightly three-dimensional relief-like fabric surfaces.

23rd November 2020

Knitting Industry
 |  Obertshausen, Germany

Knitted Outerwear

"Seersucker clothing is a hit every summer season,” says warp knitting machine builder Karl Mayer. “The fabrics look cool and can be worn without breaking into a sweat. This is thanks to slightly three-dimensional relief-like fabric sides. The crepe-like surfaces ensure that the textiles do not lie directly on the skin, but are instead kept away from the body,” the German company says. “This allows for ventilation and moisture balance. What’s more, the relief-like structures mean the pieces do not need to be ironed after washing – and also give the fabric its name. The word seersucker originates from Persian and means shir o shekar: milk and sugar,” it adds.

Bringing movement to the surface. © Karl Mayer.

The fabrics offer many advantages are traditionally produced on rapier looms. However, thanks to a recent breakthrough by Melanie Bergmann, Textile Technology Product Developer at Karl Mayer, it is now possible to produce seersucker-effect fabrics on warp knitting machines. To complete her work, Melanie used a high-performance tricot machine – type HKS 4-M EL in E 28 – and a polyamide winding yarn with an elastane core.

The count of the textured PU/PA yarn is dtex 110 f 24. “The material was tensioned in GB 1 and GB 2 and creates a great visual effect when relaxing,” explains Melanie Bergmann. The surface structure and elastic properties can both be changed by lapping the wrapping yarn differently. The possibilities were explored when implementing various sample series at the end of last year. During further trials in March 2020, Melanie Bergmann also influenced the elasticity, as well as the flatness and the characteristics of the 3D effects using different indentations, Karl Mayer says.

 The new fabrics with a versatile, moving surface design enable warp knitting companies to effectively expand their production repertoire. © Karl Mayer.

The new fabrics with a versatile, moving surface design enable warp knitting companies to effectively expand their production repertoire, according to Karl Mayer. The company particularly sees potential for clothing and home textile manufacturers in Turkey. Warp knitting is generally highly efficient compared to many other surface forming processes and results in products that neither pull stitches nor fray at the edges, concludes Karl Mayer.

Karl Mayer Website

Latest Reports

Business intelligence for the fibre, textiles and apparel industries: technologies, innovations, markets, investments, trade policy, sourcing, strategy...

Find out more