HOW LINEN WAS MADE IN EGYPT
- All clothes were almost always made of linen which is made from flax.
- Flax: a plant having small leaves, blue flowers and stems about two feet tall.
- Flax was pulled out of the ground, not cut.
- This backbreaking work was done mostly by men.
- Half-ripe flax stems made the best thread.
- If the stems were too ripe, they were used for mats and rope.
- Flax stems were soaked for several days.
- The fibers were separated.
- Then the fibers were beaten until soft.
- The spinner attached the fibers to the spindle.
- The fibers were twisted into strong thread.
- The weaving was done on a loom.
- A loom is a frame made of two beams held by four pegs in the ground.
- White linen needed constant washing. It was washed in the river or canal, rinsed, then pounded on a stone, and, bleached in the sun.
- Linen clothes needed to be repleated every time they were washed.
- To do so they pressed the linen into grooves on a wooden board and let it dry.
Here is how linen is made today
BE LINEN MOVIE from Benoit MILLOT on Vimeo.
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