For Angora rabbits, yes. For short-haired rabbits like the Rex, no.
You get angora wool off of the rabbit by plucking the hair or cutting the hair off with a pair of scissors when it molts. The molting is part of natural growth.
No way. Rabbits have fur, not wool. Both fur and wool are types of hair, but wool is a particularly curly type of hair. Rabbit hair isn't like that.Actually, there is a breed of rabbit that is used for its hair, the breed known as the Angora rabbit, which produces very fine hair called Angora used in textiles. However, most rabbit breeds are not used for fibre. Some are more commonly used for meat or as companion animals.
Angora It is actually wool, not hair.
Angora I believe is Wool. -- further -- Angora is a fabric made from the hair of either the Angora goat or the Angora rabbit.
Your question is unclear. The 'hair' of sheep is wool.
Angora wool!
Wool
That is the correct spelling of "wool" (sheep's hair).
The hair of a sheep is referred to as wool. Fleece is the wool of a lamb.
One could surmise that wool is the 'hair' of the fleece-bearing animal that grows it. Hair, however, is not made from wool or fleece, unless of course, you're asking about a Raggedy Ann or Raggedy Andy doll. Their hair may be made from wool.
most wool comes from goats. It is their hair.
They were selectively bred to produce wool.