Camel hair is, variously, the hair of a camel; a type of cloth made from camel hair; or a substitute for authentic camel hair; and is classified as a specialty hair fibre. When woveninto haircloth, using the outer protective fur called guard hair, camel hair is coarse and inflexible. However, other varieties of camel hair cloth-especially those that blend camel hair with wool- or from the pure under coat are soft and plush. Pure camel hair, frequently used for coats, is gathered when camels molt in warmer seasons. This undercoat is very soft, and is separated from the dense, coarse guard hair for cloth us
No, camels do not yield wool.
No it can not
yes
While most wool comes from sheep, there are many animals that yield wool including goats, llamas, camels and rabbits. Each group of animals yields wool with different characteristics.
Normal wool probly cotton
alpacas
Because if someone sits on them it will get hurt without the wool
No.
The adult Arvana camel yields a fleece wool.
places where wool is produced in india
Camels do not give wool; this is a product created only by sheep. However, alpacas are closely related to camels and can be raised and sheared for fiber that can be cleaned, spun and woven similar to wool.
It is shorn (cut) from the sheep.
No! Sheep's have wool they are kind of not a lot.<3
From Wikipedia, below: "The quality of wool is determined by its fiber diameter, crimp, yield, color, and staple strength. Fiber diameter is the single most important wool characteristic determining quality and price."
Because if someone sits on them it will get hurt without the wool