They were usually white or off-white if the cloth had not been bleached. Dyeing linen was difficult and not widely practised.
Depends how bleached it is. If it's bleached out completely, no.
bleach is 'la javel' (fem.) or ' l'eau de javel ' in French. The fabric or linen that do not accept bleach are market on their label with a symbol 'do not bleach', that the French read as 'ne pas javelliser' (verb) or 'pas de javel'. So unbleached linen would be 'du linge qui n'a pas été javellisé', but that's a bit clumsy as a sentence.
Pulp to be used for white paper is bleached
most clothing was not dyed and left unbleached so it was a cream or dirty white colour. If you were prosperous enough your clothing was bleached white. Dyeing linen was difficult so coloured clothes were expensive and rare.
Poly linen is the mix of polyester and linen.
you cant dink bleach so none bleached
Yes, is the simple answer. He does have his teeth bleached.
Linen is made from the fibers of flax plants.
Bleached yarn is yarn whose colour has been whitened or faded.
Linen is made from flax
yes it dose because it is some type of poison that is not good for bleached hair but if its natural then nothing would happen because bleached ha is is effected.