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Is polyester wrongly demonised? A textile engineer explains

Stephanie Vinzens
13/2/2024
Translation: machine translated

People like to turn up their noses at polyester clothing. However, the material definitely has a right to exist, as lecturer Angela Wagner explains.

Angela, polyester has a bad reputation. As a textile expert, do you give it a wide berth?

On the contrary. As a passionate textile engineer, I can get excited about all kinds of fibres.

What exactly excites you about polyester ? Polyester is a quick-change artist. The material is particularly outstanding in the functional area - and can do many things that natural fibres cannot.

So natural fibres are not fundamentally better?

No. The choice of fibre always depends on what the garment ultimately needs to be able to do.

What makes polyester a popular choice for functional clothing?

Polyester has a high tensile strength and is resistant to deformation, light and weather. In other words, it is very robust. The fibre also absorbs hardly any moisture. This is particularly relevant in the sports and outdoor sector.

Can you do that?

When you sweat in a cotton T-shirt, the fibre soaks up moisture and stays wet for a long time. As a result, our body cools down. An effect that we want to prevent. Polyester fibres, on the other hand, absorb virtually no sweat, instead wicking it to the surface where it can evaporate.

So why does sweating in polyester clothing sometimes feel so uncomfortable?

Because the wearing comfort also depends heavily on the finish. In other words, what type of yarn the fibres are spun into. And even more important: how the yarn is ultimately processed, for example as a knitted or woven fabric. Knitted fabric is more permeable to air than tightly woven material.

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