Heaps of King Cotton in Quilt Batting
Heaps of King Cotton in Quilt Batting
An Excerpt from American Cotton: Farm to Quilt
By Teresa Duryea Wong
Quilts
have been examined, copied, shared, preserved, destroyed, written about and
researched for 200 years. Yet, there’s very little curiosity about the material
between the two layers of fabric that make a quilt a quilt. Like a classic
peanut-butter-and-jelly sandwich, the layers of bread are important, but it’s
the stuff inside that makes it yummy.
Quilt
batting, or what used to be called wadding, is the soft, solid, yummy layer
inside a quilt sandwich. The batting is what makes a quilt warm and gives it
its drape, and today a quilter can find a batting in almost every make, shape,
and material, whether thick or thin, to meet her needs. Besides cotton, other
common quilt batting materials are wool, polyester, cotton blends and bamboo.
The
process to make cotton batting is strangely very hi-tech, but also strikingly
similar to the way it has been made for a century. I was fortunate to visit the
manufacturing facility owned by The Warm Company in Elma, Washington in 2018,
and it was fascinating to learn how the cotton travels through giant automated
machines and comes out the other end as a smooth, finished product, ready for
the billions of quilt stitches that will eventually pierce it.
Heaps
of American cotton are purchased each year and turned into cotton batting for
quilts, as well as industrial batting for furniture and bedding. The Warm
Company alone, whose primary business is quilting, purchases four million
pounds of fresh, American cotton annually. To put that in perspective, it takes
roughly 14,000 acres of West Texas farmland to produce four million pounds of
cotton. That means the Warm Company buys enough cotton to cover the entire crop
of at least four farmers, and they are spending approximately $3.2 million
annually on those purchases.
The
Warm Company has strict requirements for fiber length, thickness, strength, and
color, and only the cleanest cotton is chosen. The raw cotton, which has been
ginned to remove leaves, sticks, seeds, etc., travels to the Warm facilities
where it is cleaned again, twice in fact. This super-fine cleaning process
separates even more leaf or stick fragments from the fiber. It is natural for
very tiny specs of leaf or stick to remain, even after all this rigorous
cleaning. Those tiny specs are called pepper. The pepper look is what you will
see in the batting named Warm & Natural. This product is so popular with
quilters that many consider it essential to quiltmaking. Warm & Natural
batting is not bleached, and as the name suggests, the batting has a natural-looking
creamy, off-white color.
A
second type of batting is made with purified cotton, and this is the cotton
used to make Warm & White batting. With purified cotton, the individual
fibers are scoured to remove natural oils and discoloration. The treatment
involves a gentle bath of hydrogen-peroxide. This process leaves the fibers so
clean and white that the fibers actually become coarse, so a lubricant is added
to the cotton, not unlike when human hair is bleached and needs a conditioner
to make it soft again. The Warm & White batting is preferred by many
quilters who seek that clean, pure snowy-white color.
After
cleaning, the cotton begins its long journey through the conveyor-belt maze of
automation that turns fibers into batting. The cotton fibers are formed into
layers, and the layers are laid on top of each other. Eventually a scrim is
added to the layers of cotton fiber. A scrim looks a lot like a common dryer
sheet, only it is significantly lighter and thinner. The fibers and scrim are
needle-punched millions of times, in a matter of seconds, by very long needles.
As the needles move up and down through the fibers, they force the cotton down
through the scrim and back up again until the fibers and scrim essentially
become completely intertwined. Thanks to the scrim, the batting holds together
and at the Warm Company, no glue is added. Stitches in most modern batting can
be up to 10 inches apart without worrying about the batting moving or bunching
up.
American Cotton: Farm to Quilt by Teresa Duryea Wong, shares the story
of the American cotton farmer, America’s textile industry and their connection
to quilting.
Available online at https://TeresaDuryeaWong.com
Very interesting. Thank you.
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