Linen Flax products from Latvia
     
 
Note: This page is "work in progress" check back from time to time as we may have added new materials - Your comments and suggestions welcomed. 
 
     
  All about FLAX - Links, "tid-bits" and maybe more than you wanted to know.
 
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FLAX cultivation and processing for both food products and for fabric has been reported to go back several thousand years. The are numerous references to many aspects of FLAX. But, these references are scattered over many many Internet site, books, publications and more. So, we have decided to embark on an effort to find, catalog and list as many possible recourses as possible on this site and our related site about the Healthy aspects of FLAX  (www.FlaxforHealth.info)  and all its' related products. As updates will be made on a regular basis, please bookmark this site and come back often. If you have references to FLAX that you would like to share, please send us an email with the details. Our contact information may be found at: www.HealthyLinen.tel
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  From IYNF -- Flax fibres obtained from the stems of the plant Linum usitatissimum are used mainly to make linen. The plant has been used for fibre production since prehistoric times. It grows best at northern temperate latitudes, where moderately moist summers yield fine, strong but silky flax.

Like cotton, flax fibre is a cellulose polymer, but its structure is more crystalline, making it stronger, crisper and stiffer to handle, and more easily wrinkled. Flax fibres range in length up to 90 cm, and average 12 to 16 microns in diameter. They absorb and release water quickly, making linen comfortable to wear in hot weather.
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From Wikipedia --  Flax (also known as common flax or linseed) (binomial name: Linum usitatissimum) is a member of the genus Linum in the family Linaceae. It is native to the region extending from the eastern Mediterranean to India and was probably first domesticated in the Fertile Crescent. This is called as Jawas/Javas or Alashi in Marathi. Flax was extensively cultivated in ancient Egypt. New Zealand flax is not related to flax, but was named after it as both plants are used to produce fibers.

Flax is an erect annual plant growing to 1.2 m tall, with slender stems. The leaves are glaucous green, slender lanceolate, 20–40 mm long and 3 mm broad. The flowers are pure pale blue, 15–25 mm diameter, with five petals; they can also be bright red. The fruit is a round, dry capsule 5–9 mm diameter, containing several glossy brown seeds shaped like an apple pip, 4–7 mm long.

In addition to referring to the plant itself, the word "flax" may refer to the unspun fibers of the flax plant.

Flax is grown both for its seeds and for its fibers. Various parts of the plant have been used to make fabric, dye, paper, medicines, fishing nets, hair gels and soap. It is also grown as an ornamental plant in gardens.  read more

 
     
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  last revised --  2 August 2009 - 09:46