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Attached
Cushion
- A cushioning material, such as foam, rubber, urethane,
PVC, etc. adhered to the back side of a carpet to provide
additional dimensional stability, thickness and padding.
Average Pile Yarn Weight - Mass per unit
area of the pile yarn including buried portions of the pile
yarn. In the U.S., it is usually expressed as ounces per
square yard.
Backing - Fabrics and yarns that make up
the back of the carpet as opposed to the carpet pile or
face. In tufted carpet:
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Primary
backing - A woven or non-woven fabric in which the yarn
is inserted by the tufting needles. |
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Secondary
backing - Fabric laminated to the back of the carpet
to reinforce and increase dimensional stability. |
In woven carpet, the backing is the "construction yarns"
which are interwoven with the face yarn.
Berber - Loop-pile carpet tufted with thick
yarn, such as wool, nylon or olefin. Often having random specks
of color in contrast to a base hue, this floor covering has
a full, comfortable feel, while maintaining an informal, casual
look. Currently, this term has expanded to describe many level
or multi-level loop carpet styles.
Binding - A band or strip sewn over a carpet
edge to protect, strengthen or decorate the edge.
Broadloom - A term used to denote carpet
produced in widths wider than 6 feet. Broadloom is usually
12 feet wide, but may also be 13'6" and 15 feet wide.
Bulked continuous filament (BCF) - Continuous
strands of synthetic fiber formed into yarn bundles of a given
number of filaments and texturized to increase bulk and cover.
Texturizing changes the straight filaments into kinked or
curled configurations.
Ceramic tile: Flat shapes made of unglazed
or glazed fired clay. Used for floors by setting in mortar
or cement in a variety of patterns. Ceramic tile is strong,
durable and easy to clean.
Construction - The manufacturing method (i.e.
tufted, woven) and the final arrangement of fiber and backing
materials as stated in its specification.
Cork flooring - a natural resilient floor
covering. Made from the bark of cork oak trees, cork flooring
is available in both tiles and sheets. It is available in
many different colors, including natural and can also be found
reinforced with resins or vinyl.
Cushion - Any kind of material placed under
carpet to provide softness and adequate support when it is
walked upon. Also referred to as "padding" or "underlay,"
although "cushion" is the preferred term. Cushion
under most residential carpet should be a thickness no greater
than 7/16".
Cut Pile - A carpet fabric in which the face
is composed of cut ends of pile yarn.
Cut and Loop Pile - A carpet fabric in which
the face is composed of a combination of cut ends of pile
yarns and loops.
Density - Refers to the amount of pile yarn
in the carpet and the closeness of the tufts. In general,
the denser the pile, the better the performance.
Dimensional Stability - The ability of the
carpet to retain its original size and shape, e.g. a secondary
backing adds dimensional stability to carpet.
Direct Glue-Down - An installation method
whereby the carpet is adhered to the floor.
Double Glue-Down - An installation method
whereby the carpet cushion is first adhered to the floor with
an adhesive, and the carpet is then glued to the cushion.
Engineered hardwood floors - constructed
from several thin sheets of wood (called plies) that are laminated
together to form one plank.
Filament - A single continuous strand of
natural or synthetic fiber.
Fluffing - Appearance on carpet surface of
loose fiber fragments left during manufacture; not a defect,
but a characteristic that disappears after carpet use and
vacuuming. Sometimes called "fuzzing" or "shedding."
Frieze - Pronounced "free-zay,"
this tightly twisted yarn gives carpet a rough, nubby appearance.
Fuzzing - Hairy effect on fabric surface
caused by fibers slipping out of the yarn with wear or wet
cleaning.
Gauge - The distance between two needle points
expressed in fractions of an inch. Applies to both knitting
and tufting.
Glazed tile - Fired clay tiles that are then
coated with a matte or glossy sealant. Glazed tiles absorb
less moisture.
Heat setting - The process that sets the
twist by heat or steam, enabling yarns to hold their twist
over time. Important in cut pile carpet. Most nylon, olefin
and polyester cut pile carpets are heat-set.
Indoor/Outdoor carpet: Carpet made of super-resilient
fibers (example: olefin or polyester) in order to withstand
outdoor use.
Laminate flooring - Dense fiberboard core
with a paper pattern layer sealed under high pressure with
a plastic-like substance. Sold as planks and panels in which
the paper layer depicts a natural flooring such as wood or
stone.
Level Loop - A carpet construction in which
the yarn on the face of the carpet forms a loop with both
ends anchored into the carpet back. The pile loops are of
substantially the same height and uncut, making a smooth,
level surface. Linoleum
- First resilient floor made of linseed oil, gums,
cork or wood dust and pigments. Widely used in the 1950's
and greatly admired for the variety of patterns and colors,
linoleum was replaced with vinyl flooring and has passed
into history. It is no longer available in the United States.
Loop Pile - Carpet style having a pile
surface consisting of uncut loops. May be woven or tufted.
Also called "round wire" in woven carpet terminology.
Luster - Brightness or sheen of fibers,
yarns, carpet or fabrics.
Marble - Elegant polished stone flooring
usually sold as tiles. Marble is "floated" in
a cement underlayment to form a smooth glossy surface.
Multi-level Loop carpet - Carpet with two
or three levels forming a random sculptural surface.
Oriental rug - Hand-woven or hand knotted
rugs traditionally made in the Middle or Far East. Generally,
the more knots per square inch the more precious the carpet.
Parquet floors - Wood flooring, usually
in the form of tiles that is laid to create a pattern.
Pickled floors - Rustic looking wood flooring
that consists of rubbed white paint over a finished wood
floor.
Pile - The visible surface of carpet consisting
of yarn tufts in loop and/or cut configuration. Sometimes
called "face" or "nap".
Pilling - A condition of the carpet face
(which may occur from heavy traffic) in which fibers from
different tufts become entangled with one another, forming
hard masses of fibers and tangled tufts. Pills may be cut
off with scissors.
Plank flooring - Wood flooring made of
long boards more than 3-inches wide.
Plush - Luxuriously smooth-textured carpet
surface in which individual tufts are only minimally visible
and the overall visual effect is that of a single level
of yarn ends. This finish is normally achieved only on cut-pile
carpet produced from non-heat-set singles spun yarns by
brushing and shearing. Sometimes called "velvet-plush."
Ply - 1. A single-end component in a plied
yarn. 2. The number that tells how many single ends have
been ply-twisted together to form a plied yarn, e.g. two-ply
or three-ply.
Quarry tile - Glazed or unglazed ceramic
tile made of natural clay and shale using an extrusion process.
Usually quarry tile is in natural terracotta.
Random sheared carpet - Created by lightly
cutting high-low loop carpet so that only the higher loops
are cut. Random shearing produces a chance cut and loop
pattern.
Remnant - A small piece of carpet from
the end of a roll of carpet.
Resilience
- Ability of carpet pile or cushion to recover original
appearance and thickness after being subjected to compressive
forces or crushing under traffic.
Resilient floor - Flooring made by combining
a plastic material with filler and pigments, then pressed
into tiles or sheets. If a backing material is used, the
plastic sheet is pressed onto the backing. Types include
solid vinyl, backed or cushioned vinyl, rubber, cork, and
linoleum.
Saxony - A cut-pile carpet texture with
twisted yarns in a relatively dense, erect configuration.
The effect is well-defined tuft tips.
Sculptured carpet - Any carpet pattern
formed from high and low pile areas, such as high-low loop
or cut-and-loop.
Seams - In a carpet installation, the line
formed by joining the edge of two pieces of carpet by the
use of various seaming tapes, hand sewing or other techniques.
Seam Sealing - Procedure of coating the
trimmed edges of two carpet breadths to be joined with a
continuous bead of adhesive in order to prevent fraying
and raveling at the seam.
Serging - A method of finishing edges of
area rugs by use of heavy, colored yarn sewn around the
edges in a close, overcast stitch.
Shading - A change in the appearance of
a carpet due to localized distortions in the orientation
of the fibers, tufts or loops. Shading is not a change in
color or hue, but a difference in light reflection.
Sisal - Originally made of vegetable fibers,
the carpet industry has recently captured the look of natural
sisal and jute with the gentler, more comfortable synthetic
alternatives. Wool and synthetic alternatives are almost
worry-free and offer a variety of interesting textures,
patterns and prints.
Slate - A naturally laminated stone pieces
or tiles that are set in mortar or cement resulting in a
interesting natural pattern.
Soil Retardant - A chemical finish applied
to fibers or a carpet surface that inhibits attachment of
soil.
Solid wood floors - one solid piece of
wood that have tongue and groove sides and come in either
prefinished or unfinished styles.
Sprouting - Protrusion of individual tuft
or yarn ends about the pile surface. May be clipped with
scissors.
Staple - Short lengths of fiber that may
be converted into spun yarns by textile yarn spinning processes.
These spun yarns are also called "staple" yarns.
For carpet yarns spun on the common, modified worsted systems,
most staple is six to eight inches long. Staple fiber may
also be converted directly into nonwoven fabrics, such as
needle punched carpet.
Stitches - Stitches per inch. Number of
yarn tufts per running inch of a single tuft row in tufted
carpet.
Stretch-In - Installation procedure for
installing carpet over separate cushion using a tackless
strip; properly performed with a power-stretcher.
Strip flooring - The most popular wood
flooring, it is made of long, narrow -- about 3 inches wide
-- tongue-and-groove boards that are end-matched. Strip
flooring wider than 3 inches is referred to as plank flooring.
Tackless Strip - Wood or metal strips fastened
to the floor near the walls of a room containing either
two or three rows of pins angled toward the walls on which
the carpet backing is stretched and secured in a stretch-in
installation.
Terrazzo - A multicolored stone floor made
of small pieces of stone embedded in cement. The floor is
then polished to a high shine.
Tuft Bind - Force required to pull a tuft
from the carpet.
Tufted - Carpet manufactured by the insertion
of tufts of yarn through a carpet-backing fabric, creating
a pile surface of cut and/or loop ends.
Twist - The winding of the yarn around
itself. Should be neat and well-defined. A tighter twist
provides enhanced durability.
Underlay - Carpet cushion under rugs.
Vinyl solid flooring - This smooth surfaced
plastic floor is a mixture of vinyl resins, fillers, and
stabilizers with one color added. Produced in either square
tiles or sheet goods.
Woven - Carpet produced on a weaving loom
in which the lengthwise yarns and widthwise yarns are interlaced
to form the fabric, including the face and the backing.
Yarn Ply - The number of single yarns twisted
together to form a plied yarn.
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