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  2. Fashion Nova - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fashion_Nova

    Fashion Nova is an American fast fashion retail company. The company primarily operates online, but it also has five brick-and-mortar locations. Fashion Nova is known to use affiliate marketing, particularly on Instagram. Models, celebrities, and other customers receive payments or free clothing in exchange for generating publicity about the ...

  3. Brother Industries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brother_Industries

    Brother Industries, Ltd. (stylized in lowercase) ( Japanese: ブラザー工業株式会社, Hepburn: Burazā Kōgyō Kabushiki-gaisha) is a Japanese multinational electronics and electrical equipment company headquartered in Nagoya, Japan. Its products include printers, multifunction printers, desktop computers, consumer and industrial sewing ...

  4. Timeline of clothing and textiles technology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_clothing_and...

    1842 – John Greenough patents the first sewing machine in the United States. 1844 – John Smith of Salford granted a patent for a shuttleless rapier loom. [citation needed] 1846 – John Livesey adapts John Heathcoat's bobbinet machine into the curtain machine. 1847 – William Mason Patents his "Mason self-acting" Mule.

  5. Converter (industry) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Converter_(industry)

    Converter (industry) A converter is a company that specializes in modifying or combining raw materials [1] such as polyesters, adhesives, silicone, adhesive tapes, foams, plastics, felts, rubbers, liners and metals, as well as other materials, to create new products. Materials such as paper, plastic film, foil and cloth often are produced in ...

  6. Bill Blass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill_Blass

    Coty Award seven times; [ 1] Fashion Institute of Technology Lifetime Achievement Award, 1999 [ 1] William Ralph Blass (June 22, 1922 – June 12, 2002) was an American fashion designer. [ 1][ 2] He was the recipient of many fashion awards, including seven Coty Awards and the Fashion Institute of Technology 's Lifetime Achievement Award (1999 ...

  7. Roller printing on textiles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roller_printing_on_textiles

    Roller-printed cotton cushion cover panel, 1904, Silver Studio V&A Museum no. CIRC.675–1966 Indigo Blue & White printed cloth, American Printing Company, about 1910. Roller printing, also called cylinder printing or machine printing, on fabrics is a textile printing process patented by Thomas Bell of Scotland in 1783 in an attempt to reduce the cost of the earlier copperplate printing.

  8. Textile industry in Bangladesh - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Textile_industry_in_Bangladesh

    The textile and clothing industries provide a single source of growth in Bangladesh's rapidly developing economy. [ 1] Exports of textiles and garments are the principal source of foreign exchange earnings. By 2002 exports of textiles, clothing, and ready-made garments (RMG) accounted for 77% of Bangladesh's total merchandise exports. [ 2]

  9. Imitation of Christ (designs) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imitation_of_Christ_(designs)

    Imitation of Christ is a conceptual art project and fashion label started by former American art students Matthew Damhave and Tara Subkoff. The project initially began as an art collective, evolving into a fashion line made up of entirely recycled pieces of clothing, which Subkoff and others hand-sewed. The group enacted "guerrilla"-style ...