raw cotton and cotton made items like clothes
a cotton swab or 100% cotton rags
All Supima items can be washed just like regular cotton items. The fiber is significantly stronger than regular cotton so should be more durable over the long term. However, to maintain the best quality of the Supima or cotton item it is always desirable to be as gentle on the fabric as possible. this mainly applies to the drying process. Try never to over dry a cotton item. It is always best to remove the cotton item from the drier before it has been completely desiccated.
Yes, because there is cotton involved. Not too much, though.
Cotton was a luxury fabric during the time of the Renaissance. Cotton was not yet often farmed, and until Eli Whitney invented the cotton gin, it was not mass produced or fabric.
It's a type of fabric, consisting mohair and cotton that has not been woven for a while.
Especially after the War of 1812, cotton became "king" in the American South primarily for two reasons. First, cotton began to "boom" as a much-desired item in European markets. Second, high profits in selling cotton were assured for Southern planters due to their use of slaves as a work-force.
For ordinary cotton, you can wash it in hot water and your choice of detergents, making sure to wash with similar colors. Pure cotton will shrink if put in the dryer at high heat, so it is best to dry for about 15 minutes on a low setting and then finish drying the item by hanging it. Specially treated cotton items will have care instructions on their label.
Cotton, vinyl and latex gloves or finger cots are the best
Cotton, vinyl and latex gloves or finger cots are the best
The decorative webs that area vailable from the halloween stores are actually made of a thickly spun cotton. These cotton webs are the most common decorative item used during halloween.
Pretty sure it was either cotton or tobacco. It was cotton. Tobacco was a luxury item, that one could do without. Cotton, referred to as "king cotton," was a necessity for something much more vital--clothes. More than that, the South was more or less the sole exporter for the entire planet. However, the international cotton demand was satisfied, during the war, by plantations in the relatively new British colonies in India, so whole harvests of cotton went to waste.