Factor one: wool fibers
Any garment made of wool fiber has a pilling phenomenon, which is inevitable because natural fibers are called staple fibers, as the name implies: the fibers are shorter in length. Only are chemical fibers called long fibers, and the pilling resistance is good.
Factor two: raw material composition
Cashmere raw fiber is shorter than wool fiber. Pure cashmere fibers can resist pilling better than wool cashmere blended fibers. If a spinning mill can control the short pile ratio and the fiber length, the holding force is good, and the pilling resistance rate naturally increases. The relative blended fiber is affected, because of the different fiber composition, the fiber length is uneven, which directly affects the anti-pilling effect of yarn. It is why wool cashmere blending is easier to pilling than pure cashmere.
Factor three: weaving technology
The woolen sweaters must be well aware of this, which affects the feel and pilling resistance of garments. With NM2/26 100% cashmere single 12-stitch woven, densities also have differences. I believe many people have learned about the problem of weaving, now the major merchants are starting to make a fuss, and advocating their own weaver handle is very good. However, under normal circumstances, knit can only be used as one of the reasons for pilling of sweaters.
