Yak -- like all fleece-bearing animals -- produces the source material for wool. Yak wool is extremely fine and soft.
You can read more, below.
Wool/fibre that is harvested from yaks
yes
Yak wool is cleaned, carded and spun from yak fleece.
yak wool is mostly famous in nepal yak wool is also famous in ludhuiana and punjab
the yak is a source of wool and milk mainly...!!
Expensive is relative. Some animal fleece -- baby yak, is more rare than other animal fleece -- lamb. Relatively, you'd pay more for yarn spun from baby yak fleece than you would pay for lamb wool.
No. Wool giving animals include sheep, certain breeds of goat, alpacas, llamas, vicunas and guanacos.
Yaks produce fleece, from which wool is spun.
Yak wool is naturally resistant to odor. Baby yak wool is becoming the new cashmere, given its ultra-fine , soft feel. Unlike cashmere, it resists pilling, and is 10-15% warmer than merino wool--often touted as the highest-quality benchmark for wool.
Wool is the textile fiber obtained from the fleece of many animals including sheep, goats, lambs, camels, yak, rabbits, alpacas, vicuna and llamas.
it doesn't have a specific name but is called as cotton wool
it doesn't have a specific name but is called as cotton wool
Wool or yak hair grows naturally, just like on sheep or an angora goat. The hair is then shaved off and spun.
Probably not. Gorillas grow hair -- like humans -- and not fleece, which is required as the basis for fabricating wool.