It is used for curtains, pillows, upholstery, table cloths, chair covers, table runners etc.
Chenille, the French word for caterpillar, is typically used to
describe a type of fabric. Many fabrics, such as mohair and wool, get
their names from the fibers with which they are made. Chenille, however,
is named from the unique process by which it is made.
The chenille yarn is manufactured by placing short lengths of yarn,
called the “pile”, between two “core yarns” and then twisting the yarn
together. The edges of these piles then stand at right angles from the
yarn’s core, giving chenille both its softness and its characteristic
look. Chenille will look different in one direction compared to another,
as the fibres catch the light differently. Chenille can appear
iridescent without actually using iridescent fibers. The yarn is
commonly manufactured from cotton, but can also be made using acrylic,
rayon and olefin.
Since the late 1990s, chenille appeared in quilting in a number of
yarns, yards or finishes. As a yarn, it is a soft, feathery synthetic
that when stitched onto a backing fabric, gives a velvety appearance,
also known as imitation or “faux chenille”. Real chenille quilts are
made using patches of chenille fabric in various patterns and colours,
with or without “ragging” the seams.
The chenille effect by ragging the seams, has been adapted by
quilters for a casual country look. A quilt with a so-called “chenille
finish” is known as a “rag quilt” or, a “slash quilt” due to the frayed
exposed seams of the patches and the method of achieving this. Layers of
soft cotton are batted together in patches or blocks and sewn with
wide, raw edges to the front. These edges are then cut, or slashed, to
create a worn, soft, “chenille” effect.
Many chenille fabrics should be dry cleaned. If hand or
machine-washed, it should be machine-dried using low heat, or as a heavy
textile, dried flat to avoid stretching, never hung.
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