Llamas grow fleece which humans process into wool.
yes, they have a rough outer layer of wool and a soft inner layer of wool, just like llamas.
The Incas used Llamas for Transportation,wool,and food
Llamas are animals. They don't "make a living" as that implies they make money. However, llamas are used as beasts of burden and their wool is made into clothing.
Llamas actually have wool similar to that of a sheep, however it does not have the oil that sheep wool has. It is called fiber while on the animal. It is finer than sheep's wool and only one percent of it will shrink.
No. Wool giving animals include sheep, certain breeds of goat, alpacas, llamas, vicunas and guanacos.
Llamas, alpacas, Vicunas, guanacos, sheep, cashmere goats and cashmere rabbits can give wool. Llamas, alpacas, Vicunas and guanacos have very little lanolin in their wool so those who are allergic to sheep's wool, can typically wear lama wool.
You make wool from hair or fur. The hair from sheep, goats, Llamas, camels and even dogs and cats can be spun into wool.
Goats, llamas, alpacas, rabbits -- most fleece-bearing animals have produced fibres that have been spun into wool.
The raw material of woolen is wool, which is derived from the hair of sheep or other animals such as goats, alpacas, or llamas.
As far as what? Production? Raising them? Their wool? Please be more specific!
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.
Wool is a naturally-occuring fiber produced from sheep, angora goats, llamas, and alpacas. Wool has an oil in it called Lanolin. There is nothing special about Lamb's Wool other than the fact that it came from a younger sheep.