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.
yes, but whatever colour you dye it will be lighter than on un-bleached hair
du lin (masc.)a linen fabric: un tissu en lin
They were usually white or off-white if the cloth had not been bleached. Dyeing linen was difficult and not widely practised.
Ancient Egyptians used a material called linen.
"lin" (masc.)un tissu de lin = a linen fabric
Cloth manufactured of a blend of wool and linen would be called a wool-linen blend, usually with the percentage mix of each fibre indicated on the label.
voile
Alb.
bed linen are called 'les draps' (properly 'the sheets') in French.
A linen swagger bed will be draped in linen, more than likely in layers using a technique called swag.
It's usually called "Natural Linen" you can always check the tag it should say 100% Unbleached cotton!
Depends how bleached it is. If it's bleached out completely, no.