Publication | Closed Access
Cotton in the new millennium: advances, economics, perceptions and problems
73
Citations
227
References
2018
Year
EngineeringApplied EconomicsTechnical TextileEconomic DevelopmentNew MillenniumAgricultural EconomicsFiber ScienceEconomic HistoryHigh Performance FibresSustainable AgricultureEconomicsPublic PolicyAgricultural ImpactTextile TestingTextile StructureFashionWoven TextilesAgricultural HistoryAgrarian Political EconomyCostume DesignMan-made FibresAgricultural SystemTextile FibreTextile ScienceBusinessTextile ChemistryNatural Resource EconomicsSynthetic Fibres
Cotton is the most significant natural fibre and has been a preferred choice of the textile industry and consumers since the industrial revolution began. The share of man-made fibres, both regenerated and synthetic fibres, has grown considerably in recent times but cotton production has also been on the rise and accounts for about half of the fibres used for apparel and textile goods. To cotton's advantage, the premium attached to the presence of cotton fibre and the general positive consumer perception is well established, however, compared to commodity man-made fibres and high performance fibres, cotton has limitations in terms of its mechanical properties but can help to overcome moisture management issues that arise with performance apparel during active wear.
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