Unfortunately, the question cannot be answered as it is written. Knitted fabric itself consists of fiber, as does any other sort of fabric, whether woven, felted, crocheted, etc. So any fabric can be described as "fibers" that are "mixed together."
Wool, on it's own is itchy so it is mixed with other fibres to make it more comfortable to wear.
Wool blends are made principally for money -- it is less expensive to augment fleece with man-made fibres than it is to fabricate an all-wool yarn.
noil
In modern clothing, yes and no. The majority of the material is in fact recycled plastics mixed with other synthetic and natural fibers. However your classic wool fleece, is still mostly if not entirely sheep's wool.
The fibres mixed in polywool are polyester and wool . That's the answer fellow friends .
wool
They are fibers.
Yes, wool fibers can be dyed, indeed this is how the colored natural wool that is used to knit warm garments are given their color.
A carding machine has wire teeth that comb and clean wool, cotton, or other fibers before the fibers are spun into yarn.
Wool is the fur of sheep. It is sheared off, cleaned, spun into threads and then woven into fabric. Somewhere in there it can also be dyed or bleached. Sometimes the wool is mixed up with other fibers to improve the properties of the finished product.It is stolen from sheep.
He/she takes the raw fibers , after they are cleaned, and spins the fibers into yarn.
Silk, rayon and wool are made up of fibers.
no idia
bloc!