Nylon clothes tend to carry a charge better than cotton. This is especially true if other nylon is present, such as a nylon rug.
The biggest advantage of cotton over nylon, especially in warmer climates, is that cotton fabric is much cooler to wear than nylon. Cotton can absorb the sweat where as nylon will have you feeling hot and sticky.
I personally would have thought that cotton clothes would be preferred, as they lock in the heat and keep the person warm, silk clothes look and feel nice, but do not provide as much warmth as cotton clothing would.
Silk is well known for being warmer than wool. Nylon and cotton are poorer insulators. (As well, there are other types of "wool" which are known for being much warmer than sheep's wool...)
yes...but barley it depends on what you shrink and for how long and also how much % of it is cotton....but it should shrink
less then you. :)
The biggest advantage of cotton over nylon, especially in warmer climates, is that cotton fabric is much cooler to wear than nylon. Cotton can absorb the sweat where as nylon will have you feeling hot and sticky.
Nylon is not the best material for a bath towel. I believe cotton bath towels are much better.
I personally would have thought that cotton clothes would be preferred, as they lock in the heat and keep the person warm, silk clothes look and feel nice, but do not provide as much warmth as cotton clothing would.
Cotton is much more comfy and cotton is cooler in the summer than most of all the other materials.
Cotton, hemp, nylon & polyester all have different tensile strengths.
Cotton knickers don't make you perspire as much as man-made knickers, such as nylon.
Assuming the nylon or cotton is being use as a filler, cotton is definitely better. Nylon consists of long molecules that don't adhere well with the resin. It is also expensive. Cotton, on the other hand is cheap and has a "rougher" molecule. The resulting flox can be used to reinforce structural areas such as flanges, fastener mounts such as screws and rivets. Nonstructural filler can be made with certain polymers or glass micro balloons. This type of filler is much lighter than cotton flox.
Polyester dries quicker than cotton, as the polyester fibres don't absorb as much water.
Silk is well known for being warmer than wool. Nylon and cotton are poorer insulators. (As well, there are other types of "wool" which are known for being much warmer than sheep's wool...)
Previous answers to this question have stated that cotton burns the fastest, while synthetic fabrics burn slowest, such as Nylon. I believe this is inaccurate. My experience as a chemist tells me that synthetic clothing such as Nylon and polyester burn much more quickly than cotton.
Cotton is a better fabric than nylon for sports and exercise because, being a natural fibre, it breathes, meaning your skin can also breathe and sweat can evaporate like it is supposed to. This is similarly the case for wool. On the other hand, nylon is a synthetic polymer and hence does not absorb moisture well thereby can leave you feeling hot and clammy at the best of times, let alone during exercise and rigorous activity.
If something splashes, it will melt the nylon into your skin rather than just burning a hole... so it is much harder to remove the clothing and treat the burn.