Fabric names are the vocabulary of every sewer, designer, and textile enthusiast worth their seam ripper. From the smooth luxury of satin to the rugged honesty of denim, knowing your fabrics by name means knowing exactly what you’re working with, and what you’re capable of creating.
This list covers the essential fabric names across every major category: wovens, knits, specialty textiles, and heritage cloths. Whether you’re building a wardrobe, stocking a sewing room, or just trying to decode a care label, these are the names you need to know.
Silk and Luxury Fabrics
These are the fabrics that have defined opulence across centuries. They demand respect, and usually hand-washing.
Silk
Produced from the cocoons of silkworms, silk is one of the oldest luxury fibers in the world, with origins in ancient China dating back thousands of years. It’s lustrous, lightweight, and temperature-regulating, which is why it has never gone out of fashion. The word itself comes from Old English seolocderived from Latin and ultimately from a Greek word for the Seres, the people of the East who produced it.
Satin
Satin is not a fiber but a weave structure, one that produces that signature glossy surface and soft drape. It can be made from silk, polyester, or acetate, which is why “satin” on a label tells you about the construction, not necessarily the content. Named after Zaytun (Quanzhou), a medieval Chinese port city through which it was traded to the West.
Charmeuse
A lightweight, draping satin-weave fabric with a glossy front and a dull back, charmeuse is the go-to for lingerie, blouses, and eveningwear. The name comes from French, meaning roughly “one who charms.” It behaves beautifully on the bias and infuriatingly on the straight grain.
Chiffon
Sheer, lightweight, and slightly rough in texture, chiffon is a plain-weave fabric with a soft drape and an ethereal look. The name comes from French chiffonmeaning “rag” or “scrap of cloth”, a delightfully humble origin for something so elegant. It’s notoriously tricky to cut and sew because it shifts constantly under the needle.
Organza
Organza is a thin, crisp, sheer fabric traditionally woven from silk, though synthetic versions are common today. It holds structure where chiffon flows, which makes it ideal for voluminous skirts, overlays, and sculptural fashion. The name’s exact etymology is debated, but it’s likely derived from Urgench, a city in Central Asia that was historically a major silk-trading center.
Taffeta
Crisp, smooth, and with that distinctive rustle when you move, taffeta is a plain-woven fabric with a fine ribbed texture. It comes from the Persian word taftanmeaning “to spin” or “to weave.” It’s the fabric of formal gowns and ballet costumes, and it photographs exceptionally well.
Dupioni
Dupioni (also spelled dupion) is a silk fabric woven from two threads simultaneously in the shuttle, producing irregular slubs that give it a distinctive textured appearance. It’s crisper than charmeuse and more casual than pure silk, with a natural sheen. The name comes from Italian doppionemeaning “double.”
Velvet
Velvet has a woven pile structure that creates its unmistakable soft, dense surface. It originated in the Far East and became a symbol of European aristocracy from the medieval period onward. The name traces back through Old French and Italian to a Latin root suggesting “shaggy” or “downy.”
Brocade
Brocade is a richly decorative woven fabric with raised patterns, often incorporating gold or silver threads. The word comes from Spanish and Portuguese brocadomeaning “embossed cloth.” It’s been a fabric of ceremony and power across Asian, European, and Middle Eastern traditions for over a thousand years.
Cotton and Everyday Wovens
These are the workhorses, the fabrics that built global textile industries and still form the backbone of most wardrobes and sewing projects.
Cotton
Cotton is the most widely used natural fiber in the world, and its name comes from the Arabic qutn. It’s breathable, washable, and versatile to a degree that no synthetic has fully matched. From fine lawn to heavy canvas, “cotton” describes a fiber, not a weave, which is why it appears across dozens of different fabric types.
Muslin
A plain-weave cotton fabric ranging from very sheer to quite sturdy, muslin is named after Mosul, the city in present-day Iraq where it was first produced. In sewing, a “muslin” also means a test garment made before cutting into your good fabric. It’s essential, unglamorous, and irreplaceable.
Calico
Calico is a plain-woven unbleached or printed cotton fabric, named after Calicut (now Kozhikode) on the Malabar Coast of India, from which it was first exported to Europe. In American usage, calico typically refers to a printed cotton with small floral or geometric patterns. In British usage, it more often means an undyed, unbleached cotton cloth.
Chambray
Chambray is a plain-weave fabric with a colored warp and a white weft, giving it a soft, heathered appearance that’s often mistaken for denim. Named after Cambrai, a city in northern France. It’s lighter and softer than denim and is one of the best fabrics for warm-weather shirting.
Denim
The name denim is a corruption of “serge de Nîmes”, a twill-weave fabric from Nîmes, France. The indigo-dyed cotton twill we know today as denim was popularized in the American West as workwear and became the most globally recognized fabric of the 20th century. Its diagonal rib is the clearest sign of its twill construction.
Canvas
Canvas is a heavy, plain-woven fabric traditionally made from cotton or linen (and historically from hemp, the name comes from the Latin cannabis). It’s used for bags, sails, awnings, upholstery, and artist surfaces. Its durability is its defining quality.
Cambric
A fine, closely woven white or plain-colored cotton or linen fabric, cambric is named after Cambrai, the same French city that gave us chambray, though cambric is a much finer, crisper cloth. It was traditionally used for handkerchiefs, shirts, and baby clothing, and its smooth finish comes from a calendering process.
Batiste
Batiste is an extremely fine, soft, plain-weave fabric made from cotton or sometimes linen. The name is traditionally attributed to Baptiste of Cambrai, a 13th-century French weaver credited with perfecting the technique. It’s one of the lightest woven cotton fabrics and is used for heirloom sewing, christening gowns, and fine blouses.
Lawn
Lawn is a very fine, sheer, lightweight cotton or linen fabric with a crisp finish. The name likely comes from Laon, a French city known for its linen production. Liberty of London’s printed lawn fabrics are among the most celebrated in the sewing world.
Poplin
Poplin is a plain-weave fabric with a fine horizontal rib created by using a heavier weft than warp. The name is thought to derive from papelinea fabric made in the papal city of Avignon, France. It’s the standard fabric for dress shirts and is prized for its smooth hand and slight sheen.
Broadcloth
Broadcloth is a tightly woven, smooth-finished cotton or wool fabric with a subtle horizontal rib. The name originally referred to cloth woven on a wide loom, broader than the standard width of the time. Today it’s most commonly found in dress shirts and is nearly synonymous with poplin in American fabric stores.
Flannel
Flannel is a soft, loosely woven fabric that has been napped on one or both sides to create its signature fuzzy surface. The word’s origin is uncertain but may come from Welsh gwlanenmeaning “wool article.” Cotton flannel is the fabric of pajamas and cozy quilts; wool flannel is the fabric of classic tailored trousers.
Gauze
Gauze is an open, plain-weave fabric with a loose construction that gives it a sheer, airy quality. The name is widely believed to derive from Gaza, a city in the Middle East historically associated with lightweight fabric production. It’s used in medicine, in fashion overlays, and in double-gauze form for baby clothing and soft apparel.
Gingham
Gingham is a plain-weave cotton fabric with a checked or plaid pattern woven directly into the cloth, not printed on top. The word may come from Malay genggangmeaning “striped.” Its cheerful, graphic quality has made it a staple of summer clothing, tablecloths, and children’s fashion across generations.
Madras
Madras is a lightweight, plain-woven cotton fabric with a plaid or checked pattern in bright colors, originating from the Indian city of the same name (now Chennai). Genuine madras is woven with vegetable dyes that bleed slightly when washed, creating a softened, vintage effect. It became a preppy American fashion staple in the mid-20th century.
Seersucker
Seersucker is a thin, puckered cotton fabric woven with alternating slack and tight warp threads to create its distinctive crinkled surface. The name comes from Persian shir o shakarmeaning “milk and sugar,” describing the alternating smooth and rough stripes. It’s the quintessential warm-weather suiting fabric across the American South.
Cheesecloth
Cheesecloth is a loosely woven cotton gauze originally used in cheesemaking to drain whey from curds. Its extremely open weave makes it the most breathable cotton fabric available, and it’s used in cooking, cleaning, and as a fashion fabric for boho-style garments and costumes. It frays dramatically, which is either a problem or a design feature depending on the project.
Drill
Drill (or drilling) is a strong, hard-wearing twill-woven cotton fabric, similar to denim but typically lighter and without the indigo dye. The name comes from the German Drillich and the Latin trilixmeaning “three-threaded.” It’s been used for military uniforms, workwear, and safari clothing for centuries.
Ticking
Ticking is a tightly woven, very durable cotton or linen fabric traditionally used to cover mattresses and pillows because it’s strong enough to contain feather filling. It typically features narrow woven stripes in navy or black on white. Its crisp, utilitarian look has made it popular in home decor and casual fashion as well.
Wool and Tailoring Fabrics
Wool fabrics have been at the heart of professional tailoring for centuries, and the names here are the vocabulary of every bespoke suit and quality coat.
Wool
Wool is the fiber shorn from sheep, and it has been spun, woven, and knitted by humans for at least ten thousand years. The Old English word wull traces back to Proto-Germanic roots. As a fabric, wool encompasses an enormous range of weights, textures, and constructions, from delicate voile to heavy melton.
Tweed
Tweed is a rough, unfinished woolen cloth woven in a plain or twill weave, often with a mixed color effect from using different colored yarns. It likely takes its name from the Tweed River in the Scottish Borders, though another account says it was a misreading of “tweel,” the Scottish word for twill. Harris Tweed, hand-woven in the Scottish Outer Hebrides, is among the most famous textiles in the world.
Herringbone
Herringbone is not strictly a fabric but a distinctive V-shaped twill weave pattern that resembles the skeleton of a herring fish. It’s most commonly executed in wool for suits and coats, though it appears in cotton and synthetic fabrics too. The name is purely descriptive and entirely accurate.
Houndstooth
Houndstooth is a duotone textile pattern with a broken check or abstract four-pointed shape, resembling the jagged tooth of a hound. Like herringbone, it’s a pattern rather than a fiber, woven most often into wool suiting fabric. It became a fashion icon through Coco Chanel and has never fully left the runway.
Melton
Melton is a heavy, dense, smooth wool fabric that has been heavily milled and sheared to create a nearly felt-like surface with little visible weave. Named after Melton Mowbray in Leicestershire, England. It’s the fabric of classic peacoats, riding jackets, and billiard table covers.
Gabardine
Gabardine is a tightly woven, smooth, twill-woven fabric with a fine diagonal rib on the surface. It can be made from wool, cotton, or synthetics, but wool gabardine is the gold standard for tailored trousers and coats. Thomas Burberry patented a version of the fabric in 1888, and it became the foundation of the iconic Burberry trench coat.
Serge
Serge is a twill-woven fabric with a smooth surface and a pronounced diagonal rib, traditionally made from wool. It’s one of the oldest named fabrics in the European textile tradition, and its name traces back through French to Latin sericameaning “silken”, ironic, since it’s most commonly a wool cloth. It was the fabric of military uniforms and school blazers across the 19th and 20th centuries.
Worsted
Worsted refers to a type of wool yarn spun from long, combed fibers, and by extension to the smooth, firm, flat-surfaced fabrics woven from that yarn. The name comes from Worstead, a village in Norfolk, England, that was a major wool-weaving center in the Middle Ages. Worsted wool fabrics are the smooth, sleek cousins of tweeds and flannels.
Cashmere
Cashmere is a luxuriously soft fiber combed from the undercoat of Cashmere goats, named after the Kashmir region of South Asia where the fiber has been processed for centuries. Woven or knitted cashmere fabric is prized for its exceptional softness and warmth relative to its weight. It’s among the most expensive natural fibers in commercial use.
Bouclé
Bouclé is a fabric woven or knitted from bouclé yarn, which has loops and curls along its length, creating a characteristically bumpy, textured surface. The name comes directly from the French word for “buckled” or “curled.” Chanel’s signature bouclé tweed jacket, introduced in the 1950s, is one of the most replicated garments in fashion history.
Felt
Felt is a non-woven textile produced by matting, condensing, and pressing wool fibers together using moisture and agitation. It is one of the oldest textiles known to human civilization, predating weaving. Because it has no grain and doesn’t fray, it’s uniquely easy to work with for crafts, millinery, and appliqué.
Linen and Plant Fiber Fabrics
These fabrics come from plant sources other than cotton and carry some of the longest histories of any textiles on earth.
Linen
Linen is woven from the fibers of the flax plant and is one of the oldest textiles in human history, linen fragments have been found in prehistoric lake dwellings in Switzerland. The Old English word lin comes from the Latin linum for flax. It’s stronger than cotton, gets softer with every wash, and wrinkles magnificently, which is either a flaw or its most honest quality.
Burlap
Burlap (called hessian in British English) is a coarse, woven fabric made from jute or sometimes sisal or hemp. Its name’s origin is uncertain, though it may derive from a German or Dutch word for a type of coarse cloth. It’s used for sacking, garden projects, and, when embraced by the crafting world, rustic home decor and wedding aesthetics.
Hessian
Hessian is the British name for what Americans call burlap: a rough, open-weave fabric made from jute. The name refers to Hesse, a region of Germany, because Hessian soldiers during the 18th century were known to use this fabric. It’s coarser and stiffer than most other woven fabrics and is primarily used for utilitarian purposes.
Jute
Jute refers both to the plant fiber and to the fabric woven from it. It’s one of the most affordable natural fibers in the world and one of the most widely produced, primarily in Bangladesh and India. The name comes from the Sanskrit jutameaning “twisted hair.” As a fabric, it’s coarse, biodegradable, and increasingly popular in sustainable fashion and home goods.
Knit and Stretch Fabrics
Knit fabrics behave completely differently from wovens, they stretch, they recover, and they require different tools and techniques. These are the essential names.
Jersey
Jersey is a single-knit fabric with a smooth face and a purl back, named after the island of Jersey in the English Channel, which was historically known for its wool knitting industry. It’s stretchy in width and slightly in length, drapes well, and is the fabric of T-shirts, fitted dresses, and athletic wear. Coco Chanel popularized jersey as a fashion fabric in the 1910s, which was genuinely revolutionary at the time.
Interlock
Interlock is a double-knit fabric produced by interlocking two ribbed fabrics so that both sides look identical. It’s more stable and less stretchy than single jersey, with a smooth surface on both sides. It’s used for baby clothing, fitted tops, and any knit project where you want the fabric to maintain its shape without too much give.
Rib Knit
Rib knit is characterized by alternating columns of knit and purl stitches that create vertical ridges and give the fabric excellent horizontal stretch and recovery. It’s the fabric of cuffs, waistbands, and neckbands on T-shirts and sweatshirts, and it’s used as a standalone fabric for fitted tops and dresses. The name is purely descriptive of the ribbed texture.
French Terry
French terry is a knit fabric with a smooth face and looped or piled surface on the reverse. Unlike traditional terry cloth, the loops are hidden on the inside, giving garments a clean exterior with a soft, absorbent lining. It’s the fabric of choice for sweatshirts, sweatpants, and casual athletic wear.
Fleece
In fabric terms, fleece is a soft, brushed knit fabric typically made from polyester, designed to mimic the warmth and softness of wool fleece. The name comes from the Old English fleosmeaning the woolly coat of a sheep. Polar fleece, developed by Malden Mills in the 1970s, transformed outdoor and casual clothing permanently.
Spandex
Spandex (also called Lycra or elastane) is a synthetic fiber known for its exceptional elasticity, capable of stretching to many times its original length and recovering fully. The name “spandex” is an anagram of “expands.” Developed by DuPont in the late 1950s, it transformed activewear, swimwear, and any garment that needs to move with the body.
Ponte
Ponte (or ponte di Roma) is a double-knit fabric with a stable, firm hand and minimal stretch. The name is Italian, referencing Rome, though the exact origin of the connection is unclear. It holds its shape beautifully, doesn’t fray, and is one of the most beginner-friendly knit fabrics to sew because it behaves almost like a woven.
Velour
Velour is a knit fabric with a cut-pile surface that gives it a soft, velvety texture. The name comes from the French word for “velvet.” It’s stretchier than woven velvet and is primarily used for casual and athletic wear, the velour tracksuit had a significant cultural moment in the early 2000s and has since had several revivals.
Specialty and Novelty Fabrics
These fabrics don’t fit neatly into a single category but are essential names for anyone serious about textiles.
Lace
Lace is an openwork fabric made by looping, twisting, or braiding threads, traditionally by hand using bobbins or needles, today mostly by machine. The word comes from the Latin laqueusmeaning “noose” or “snare,” a reference to the knotting technique. Historically one of the most labor-intensive and expensive textiles, lace was literally used as currency in 17th-century Europe.
Tulle
Tulle is a very fine, lightweight netting fabric made from silk, nylon, or rayon, named after the French city of Tulle, which was a major center of silk production. It’s the fabric of ballet tutus, wedding veils, and voluminous skirts, and its stiffness relative to its sheerness makes it ideal for structural fashion applications.
Netting
Netting is an open-mesh fabric with a regular, knotted or twisted structure, coarser and more open than tulle. It’s used for structure in skirts, for trim, and in theatrical and costume work where the mesh itself is part of the visual effect. The name is purely descriptive, it’s fabric that looks like a net.
Mesh
Mesh is a broad term for any fabric with an open, net-like construction, usually knitted or woven. Athletic mesh is knitted for breathability and stretch; rigid mesh is woven for structure. The word comes from Middle Dutch maesche. It’s the fabric of athletic jerseys, lingerie overlays, and contemporary streetwear.
Quilting Cotton
Quilting cotton is a tightly woven, medium-weight plain-weave cotton fabric specifically manufactured to be stable and colorfast for use in quilts. It typically comes in a very wide range of prints and solid colors. The term refers both to the fabric type and to the enormous industry built around it.
Interfacing
Interfacing is a fabric applied to the wrong side of garment fabric to add structure, stability, and shape to areas like collars, cuffs, and waistbands. It comes in woven, non-woven, and knit varieties, and in sew-in or fusible forms. It’s not a fashion fabric, but no serious sewer can work without knowing exactly what kind they need.
Buckram
Buckram is a coarse, stiffened cotton or linen fabric used as interfacing in tailoring and millinery. The name’s origin is uncertain, though it appears in medieval European textile records. It provides the rigid foundation for hat brims, suit lapels, and book bindings, and it’s one of those fabrics that most people have worn without ever knowing its name.
Grosgrain
Grosgrain is a ribbon or fabric with a distinctive horizontal rib texture, tightly woven for durability and firmness. The name comes from French, meaning “coarse grain.” It’s used primarily as a ribbon for trims, hat bands, and waistband facings, and its firm grip makes it ideal anywhere you need an edge that won’t stretch.
Voile
Voile is a soft, sheer, plain-weave fabric with a slight stiffness, made from cotton, silk, or synthetics. The name comes from the French word for “veil.” It’s used for curtains, blouses, and overlays, and it sits between gauze and chiffon in terms of drape and transparency.
Moiré
Moiré is a fabric with a distinctive watermark or wavy pattern created by pressing ribbed fabric through engraved rollers, which crush some of the ribs to create the optical effect. The name comes from the French word for “watered,” a reference to that rippling appearance. It’s most commonly seen in silk or synthetic taffeta.
Synthetic and Technical Fabrics
The 20th century gave us an entirely new vocabulary of fabric names built on chemistry rather than agriculture. These are the ones every sewer needs to recognize.
Nylon
Nylon was the world’s first fully synthetic fiber, developed by DuPont and introduced in 1938. The name was coined by DuPont and has no root meaning, it was invented along with the fiber. It’s strong, lightweight, abrasion-resistant, and quick-drying, and it transformed the stocking, parachute, and sportswear industries simultaneously.
Polyester
Polyester is a synthetic fabric made from petroleum-derived polymers, introduced commercially in the early 1950s. The name describes the chemical structure: a polymer formed by a condensation reaction of polyols and acids (poly + ester). It’s wrinkle-resistant, durable, and inexpensive, and while it has a complicated reputation from the 1970s, modern polyester fabrics are genuinely excellent.
Rayon
Rayon is a semi-synthetic fabric made from regenerated cellulose fiber (usually wood pulp), and it was the first manufactured fiber, developed in the late 19th century as an artificial silk. The name likely comes from the French word for “ray” of light, a reference to its sheen. It drapes beautifully, feels soft against skin, and is notoriously prone to shrinking if you wash it wrong.
Viscose
Viscose is essentially the same fiber as rayon, made through the same viscose process of dissolving cellulose and extruding it through spinnerets. In British and European usage, “viscose” is the standard term where Americans say “rayon.” The name comes from the viscous solution used in its manufacture.
Modal
Modal is a type of rayon made from beech tree pulp, developed in Japan in the 1950s and now heavily produced in Europe, particularly by the Austrian company Lenzing. It’s softer than standard rayon, more breathable, and more resistant to shrinking. It’s the fabric of premium underwear and athleisure basics.
Lyocell
Lyocell is another cellulose-based fiber, produced in a closed-loop process that recycles almost all of the solvent used, making it more environmentally responsible than traditional rayon. Tencel is the best-known brand name for lyocell. It’s smooth, strong when wet, and has a subtly silky hand that makes it popular for soft casual clothing.
Acrylic
Acrylic is a synthetic fiber made from polyacrylonitrile, developed as a wool substitute that would be more affordable and easier to care for. The name comes from the chemistry: it’s derived from acrylonitrile. It’s machine washable, colorfast, and very warm, though it lacks the moisture-management properties of natural wool.
Microfiber
Microfiber is a term for any synthetic fiber finer than one denier, resulting in fabrics that are extraordinarily soft, tightly woven, and highly effective at trapping moisture and particles. The name is descriptive: micro (very small) + fiber. It’s used for cleaning cloths, athletic wear, and ultra-soft home textiles.
Heritage and Named Weave Fabrics
Some fabric names are so strongly tied to a place, a tradition, or a specific construction that they’ve become proper nouns in the textile world.
Tartan
Tartan is a patterned cloth of criss-crossed horizontal and vertical bands in multiple colors, historically associated with Scottish Highland clans. Each clan has its own registered tartan, making the fabric one of the most culturally codified textiles in the world. The word’s origin is uncertain, but it appears in Scottish records from the 16th century.
Plaid
In American English, “plaid” is used interchangeably with “tartan” to describe any criss-crossed stripe pattern. In Scottish usage, a plaid (pronounced “plad”) is specifically a large piece of tartan cloth worn as a garment. The word comes from the Scottish Gaelic plaidemeaning “blanket” or “covering.”
Paisley
Paisley is a fabric pattern featuring a distinctive curved teardrop or boteh shape, originating in Persia and South Asia and popularized in the West through the town of Paisley, Scotland, which became a major producer of shawls featuring the design in the 19th century. The pattern precedes the town’s association with it by centuries.
Damask
Damask is a reversible figured fabric of silk, wool, linen, or cotton, with a pattern formed by the contrast between the satin and twill weave structures. It’s named after Damascus, the Syrian city through which this type of fabric was traded to Europe during the medieval period. It’s most commonly seen in tablecloths, drapery, and upholstery.
Toile
Toile (or toile de Jouy) is a fabric featuring a repeated scenic or pastoral pattern, typically printed in a single color on a white or off-white ground. The full name references Jouy-en-Josas, a French town where this style of printed cotton was produced from the 18th century. “Toile” on its own simply means “cloth” in French.
Batik
Batik is a fabric patterned using a wax-resist dyeing technique in which wax is applied to the cloth before dyeing so that the waxed areas resist the dye and retain the original color. The technique originated in Java, Indonesia, and the word comes from Javanese. UNESCO recognized Indonesian batik as an Intangible Cultural Heritage in 2009.
Ikat
Ikat is a dyeing technique and the fabric produced by it, in which the yarn is resist-dyed before weaving, creating patterns with characteristic blurred or feathered edges where the dyed and undyed sections meet. The word comes from the Malay-Indonesian mengikatmeaning “to tie” or “to bind.” It’s produced across Central Asia, Southeast Asia, South America, and Japan.
Kente
Kente is a brightly colored, hand-woven silk and cotton fabric originating from the Akan people of Ghana, traditionally woven in narrow strips that are then sewn together into larger cloths. Each color and pattern carries specific cultural meaning. The name comes from the Akan word kentenmeaning “basket.”
Madapolam
Madapolam is a soft, plain-woven cotton fabric similar to calico or muslin, originating from Madapolam (now Naidupeta), a town in Andhra Pradesh, India. It was widely used in Europe in the 19th century for undergarments and linings. It’s less commonly seen in modern fabric stores but remains in use in the textile industry.
How to Learn Fabric Names and Use Them Confidently
The fastest way to learn fabric names is to handle as many fabrics as possible. Visit a fabric store with no project in mind and just touch everything, reading the labels as you go. The connection between the name and the physical experience of the fabric is what makes the vocabulary stick.
Pay attention to the difference between fiber names (cotton, silk, wool, polyester) and construction names (twill, satin, jersey, velvet). Many fabric names combine both: “cotton twill” tells you the fiber and the weave. “silk velvet” tells you the fiber and the pile structure. Understanding this distinction immediately makes care labels and fabric descriptions much easier to decode.
When you’re sewing, knowing fabric names matters beyond shopping. It affects which needle you choose, whether you pre-wash, how you press seams, and whether you need a walking foot or a stretch stitch. A fabric’s name is a compressed set of instructions for how to treat it.
Finally, don’t be intimidated by the specialist vocabulary. Every experienced sewer once stood in front of a bolt of fabric not knowing the difference between voile and chiffon. The names become second nature quickly once you start working with them regularly, and knowing them well is one of the most practical skills in any sewist’s toolkit.
Fabric names are a living vocabulary, new technical fabrics get named every decade, and ancient textile traditions keep their names for thousands of years. The more of these names you know, the more fluently you can talk about, shop for, and work with the materials that make clothing and textile arts possible.
