Threads that go the width are the 'weft' threads that go the length are the 'warp'
Weft or warp threads
a holder that carries the thread across the loom
A loom is used to make woven fabric from thread or yarn.
The type of thread used does not typically affect the quality or pattern of a cloth being woven on a loom. The thread's quality is important in determining the durability and appearance of the fabric, but the loom's tension, weave structure, and threading pattern are key factors that influence the final outcome.
A woven material is made on a loom. A number of warp threads are alternately scissored up and down past each other and a weft thread passes across these at right angles between each crossover. The result is a cloth that has many strands.
A weaving machine works by interlacing two sets of yarn or threads called the warp and weft. The warp threads are held taut vertically on the loom, while the weft thread is woven horizontally across the warp threads. The machine raises and lowers different warp threads to create a shed through which the weft thread is passed, resulting in the formation of a woven fabric.
Different fabrics are sometimes produced by different processes, but most fabrics are woven from thread on a loom.
Its called Kente Cloth. Its traditionally woven by men. Google it.
A loom.
The Aztecs weaved on a backstrap loom and the thread was called a wrap.
It is made form some sort of cloth. The cloth may be made of natural or synthetic fibers that have been spun into a thread and then woven on a loom.
It was woven on a loom