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Woman's mourning bonnet in hard crape, c. 1880
Crêpe, also spelled crepe or crape (from the French crêpe),[1] is a silk, wool, or synthetic fiber fabric with a distinctively crisp and crimped appearance. The term "crape" typically refers to a form of the fabric associated specifically with mourning.[2] Crêpe was also historically called "crespe" or "crisp".[3]
It is woven of hard-spun yarn, originally silk "in the gum" (silk from which the sericin had not been removed). There traditionally have been two distinct varieties of the crêpe: soft, Canton or Oriental crêpe, and hard or crisped crêpe.[4]
Types
A
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Detail of an aerophane dress, c. 1827
- Aerophane
 - 1. A crimped silk gauze with a crêpe texture.
 - 2. A historic 19th century lightweight crêpe,[5]: 6 introduced in 1820,[6] and, as "crepe aerophane" in 1861.[7]
 - Albert crêpe
 - 1. A fine black silk mourning crêpe introduced in 1862.[6]
 - 2. Plain-weave crêpe.
 - 3. An English-made silk and cotton blend crêpe.[5]: 10
 - Alicienne
 - A furnishing fabric with alternating plain weave and crêpe stripes.[5]: 14
 - Alpaca crêpe
 - Rayon and acetate blend crêpe with a woollen texture, not necessarily made of alpaca yarn.[5]: 14
 - Altesse
 - A British plain-weave silk fabric with crêpe filling.[5]: 14
 - Arabian
 - 1. A British-made plain-weave cloth with figured crêpe designs.
 - 2. Piece-dyed silk crêpe embroidered with dots.[5]: 23
 - Armure
 - (See Georgian crêpe)
 
B
- Balanced crêpe
 - Crêpe woven with alternating S and Z twist yarns in both directions.[5]: 39
 - Balmoral crape
 - An 1895 English crape.[8]
 - Balzerine
 - An 1889 narrow-striped silk grenadine overlaid with wider crêpe stripes. An earlier 1830s cotton/worsted fabric, spelled balzarine, was probably not crêpe.[8]
 - Bark (or tree-bark) crêpe
 - A broad term describing rough crêpes with a bark texture.[9][10]
 - Bauté satin
 - Warp-woven satin with a plain crêpe reverse.[11]
 - Borada crape
 - A cheaper, economical version of mourning crape advertised in 1887.[3]
 - Bologna crêpe
 - Silk crêpe used for mourning, also known as valle cypre.[12]
 
C
- Canton crêpe
 - A soft silk crêpe with a pebbly surface originally associated with Canton in China, with bias ribs. Made in Britain, but exported to China, hence its name.[13]
 - Caustic soda crêpe
 - Cotton treated with chemicals to create a crêpe-like texture, often in patterns.[14]
 - Chiffon crêpe
 - Chiffon-weight crêpe.[15]
 - Chijimi
 - Japanese crêpe.[15]
 - Chirimen
 - Japanese raw silk crêpe widely used to make kimono.[16][17] When woven with a dot it is mon-chirimen.[18]
 - Courtauld crape
 - 1890s mourning crape made by Courtaulds. An 1894 variation, called 'Courtauld's new silk crêpe', was exceptionally thin and soft.[7] Courtaulds monopolised the export market for English crapes and crêpes, meaning that the textiles known as "crape anglaise" were almost always manufactured by Courtaulds up until 1940.[3]
 - Crêpe Algerian
 - A trade name for a printed pongee with a rough crêpe texture.[19]
 - Crêpe anglaise
 - A French term for English mourning crapes in black and white.[7] The only true 'crape anglais' was considered that made by Courtaulds (see Courtauld crape) which was last made in 1940.[3]
 - Crêpe Beatrice
 - Trade name for crêpe with a light warp stripe.[19]
 - Crêpe berber
 - Trade name for a piece-dyed crepe-textured pongee.[20]
 - Crêpe charmeuse
 - Lightweight silk satin with a grenadine warp and crêpe reverse.[20]
 - Crêpe chenette
 - A tradename for a strong crêpe with a pebble texture.[20]
 - Crêpe crêpe
 - Made with extra twists in the warp to create an extra-deep texture.[20]
 - Crêpe de chine
 - A fine, lightweight silk, cotton, or worsted, with a plain weave and crêpe-twist filling.[20]
 - Crêpe de chine travers
 - A ribbed crêpe de chine with heavier filling yarns introduced to the weave at regular intervals.[20]
 - Crêpe de dante
 - Crêpe with silk and wool filling.[20]
 - Crêpe de lahor
 - Cotton crêpe made in France.[20]
 - Crêpe de laine
 - A sheer wool fabric plain-woven with hard twist for a slight crêpe effect.[20]
 - Crêpe de santé
 - An undyed, closely woven, rough-textured wool-blend crêpe mixed with silk, linen or cotton, also called "health crepe".[20]
 - Crêpe de Suisse
 - 1860 dress fabric.[7]
 - Crêpe d'espagne
 - Open-weave fabric with a silk warp and wool filling.[20]
 - Crêpe diana
 - Trade name for a cotton and silk blend crêpe.[20]
 - Crêpe Elizabeth
 - English term for a mottled or pebbled georgette.[20]
 - Crêpe faille sublime
 - Silk grosgrain with a hard-twist filling.[20]
 - Crêpe flannel
 - Plain-woven worsted with a crêpe finish.[20]
 - Crêpe imperial
 - Late 19th century woollen crape.[7]
 - Crêpe jacquard
 - Crepe with designs produced by jacquard weaving.[20]
 - Crêpe janigor
 - Trade name for a heavy rib textile with alternating rayon and dull acetate warp threads, cross-dyed for varied shades.[20]
 - Crêpe jersey
 - Vertically ribbed silk crêpe resembling the knit fabric.[20]
 - Crêpe lissé (or lease)
 - A lightweight, lustrous, slightly stiffened open-weave silk or cotton crêpe, with fewer twists than a crêpe crêpe.[20]
 - Crêpela
 - French term for a crêpe effect.[20]
 - Crepeline
 - Very sheer plain-woven silk usually used in textile conservation.[20] Originally introduced in the 1870s as a cheap alternative to crepe de chine.[7]
 - Crêpella
 - Plain-woven worsted using hard-spun yarn.[20]
 - Crêpe maretz
 - An 1862 fabric.[7]
 - Crêpe marocain
 - Heavy, cross-ribbed crêpe where the filling yarn is coarser than the warp, resembling a canton crêpe.[20]
 - Crêpe meteor
 - Soft silk crêpe, twill weave reversing to satin.[20]
 - Crêpe mohair
 - Silk and mohair blend crêpe.[20]
 - Crêpe morette
 - Trade name. Lightweight worsted crêpe with heavier, looser filling.[20]
 - Crêpe mosseux
 - A type of opaque voile which resists shrinkage.[20]
 - Crêpe myosotis
 - A later mourning crêpe made in the 1930s, in crimped silk with a soft finish.[7] Courtaulds launched this textile in the early 1930s as an alternative to the increasingly unpopular traditional stiff mourning crapes.[3]
 - Crepenette
 - Crêpe-effect pongee.[20]
 - Crêpe ondese
 - Rough textured rayon-acetate blend crêpe.[20]
 - Crêpe poplin
 - A late 19th century silk-wool rib fabric with crêpe effect.[20]
 - Crêpe rachel
 - French print cotton-worsted blend crêpe.[20]
 - Crêpe radio
 - British raw silk crêpe with a ribbed effect, using alternate double rows of S-twist and Z-twist.[20]
 - Crêpe royal
 - Sheer crêpe-de-chine introduced in 1889.[7]
 - Crêpe suzette
 - A variation on crepon georgette.[20]
 - Crepine
 - Silk with crêpe dots. The name also describes a type of fringe.[20]
 - Crepoline
 - A class of transparent fabrics with a warp-wise crêpe effect.[20]
 - Crepon
 - A heavier crêpe with an exaggerated warp-directional texture produced by several weaving techniques.[20] A soft silky version was introduced in 1866, and the second, much heavier version in 1882. In the 1890s crepon also described a woollen fabric that puffed between stripes or squares, including crepon milleraye (striped) and crepon Persian (with 'Oriental patterns').[7]
 - Crystal crêpe
 - An English term for silk crêpe.[21]
 - Crespe
 - Lightweight crimped mourning gauze, late 16th century.[7]
 - Cynara
 - An crêpe-type fabric in rayon and acetate.[22]
 - Cyprus
 - Fine crêpe used for mourning hatbands in the 15th-17th centuries, made in Cyprus.[23]
 
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Chirimen

Crepe de chine
E
F
- Flat crêpe
 - Also called mock crepe or (inaccurately) French crepe. A smooth, flat plain-weave fabric, typically a silk blend, with hard-twisted yarns and ordinary yarn warp. Also used to describe a similar fabric made without crepe-twist yarns.[27]
 - French crêpe
 - 1. An inaccurately-applied name for flat crêpe.
 - 2. Plain-weave light silk or rayon cloths similar to flat crêpe.
 - 3. A lingerie weight fabric with ordinary yarn warp and a twisted filling yarn that is less twisted than typical crepe twist.[28]
 
G
- Gamsa
 - An imitation satin-backed crêpe in twill weave rayon.[29]
 - Georgette
 - 1. Sheer, lightweight fabric named after the couturiere Georgette de la Plante.[30]
 - 2. A crepe-surfaced plain weave silk or synthetic fabric with alternating S and Z twist yarns in both warp and weft.
 - 3. An English term for cotton crepe.[31]
 - Georgian crêpe
 - A chain-pebbled crêpe (called armure in France) often with diamond, shield or bird's-eye motifs.[31]
 
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Georgette
H
- Health crêpe
 - See crêpe de santé.
 
L
- Lingerie crêpe
 - See French crêpe.
 
M
N
P
R
S
- Sand crepe or moss crepe
 - Crêpe with a grained or frosted surface appearance, created with a small dobby weave.[41]
 - Sawdust crêpe
 - Similar to sand crêpe but with a harsher surface.[42]
 - Satin-back crêpe
 - Reversible fabric with a satin face and a crêpe reverse.[19]
 - Shioze
 - Japanese spun-silk crêpe.[43]
 - Spanish crêpe
 - See Crepe d'espagne.
 

Satin-back crepe
V
Y
See also
- Crêpe paper, paper with similar texture
 - Momie cloth
 
References
- ↑ Online Etymology Dictionary
 - ↑ Dictionary.com
 - 1 2 3 4 5 6 Taylor, pp. 246-253
 - ↑ One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Crape". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 7 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 379.
 - 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Tortora, Phyllis G.; Johnson, Ingrid (2013). The Fairchild Books Dictionary of Textiles (8th ed.). London: Bloomsbury Academic. ISBN 9781609015350.
 - 1 2 Lewandowski, p.6
 - 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Lewandowski, p.77
 - 1 2 Lewandowski, p. 22
 - ↑ Lewandowski, p. 25
 - ↑ Tortora & Johnson, p.45
 - ↑ Tortora & Johnson, p. 52
 - ↑ Tortora & Johnson, p. 66
 - ↑ Tortora & Johnson, p. 96
 - ↑ Tortora & Johnson, p. 52
 - 1 2 Lewandowski, p. 52
 - ↑ Ikegami, p.276
 - ↑ Panda, p.92
 - 1 2 Lewandowski, p. 194
 - 1 2 3 Tortora & Johnson, p. 156
 - 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 Tortora & Johnson, p. 157
 - ↑ Tortora & Johnson, p. 164
 - ↑ Tortora & Johnson, p. 168
 - ↑ Lewandowski, p. 81
 - ↑ Lewandowski, p. 96
 - ↑ Lewandowski, p. 99
 - ↑ Tortora & Johnson, p. 215
 - ↑ Tortora & Johnson, p. 236
 - ↑ Tortora & Johnson, p. 247
 - ↑ Tortora & Johnson, p. 254
 - ↑ Picken, Mary Brooks (1957). A Dictionary of Costume and Fashion: Historic and Modern. Courier Corporation. pp. 88. ISBN 9780486402949.
 - 1 2 Tortora & Johnson, p. 259
 - ↑ Tortora & Johnson, p. 372
 - ↑ Tortora & Johnson, p. 418
 - ↑ Lewandowski, p. 224
 - ↑ Tortora & Johnson, p. 465
 - ↑ Tortora & Johnson, p. 509
 - ↑ Tortora & Johnson, p. 510
 - ↑ Lewandowski, p. 252
 - ↑ Tortora & Johnson, p. 517
 - ↑ Lewandowski, p. 254
 - ↑ Tortora & Johnson, p. 527
 - ↑ Tortora & Johnson, p. 536
 - ↑ Tortora & Johnson, p. 555
 - ↑ Tortora & Johnson, p. 664
 - ↑ Tortora & Johnson, p. 693
 - ↑ Tortora & Johnson, p. 695
 
Bibliography
- Ikegami, Eiko (2005). Bonds of civility : aesthetic networks and political origins of Japanese culture (Reprinted ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521601153.
 - Lewandowski, Elizabeth J. (2011). The complete costume dictionary. Lanham, Md.: Scarecrow Press, Inc. ISBN 9780810877856.
 - Panda, H. (2010). The complete book on textile processing and silk reeling technology (First ed.). Delhi: Asia Pacific Business Press, Inc. ISBN 9788178331355.
 - Taylor, Lou (2009) [1983]. "Appendix 1: A Selection of Popular Mourning Fabrics". Mourning Dress: A Costume and Social History (2009 ed.). Routledge Revivals. pp. 246–253. ISBN 978-1135228439.
 - Tortora, Phyllis G.; Johnson, Ingrid (2014). The Fairchild books dictionary of textiles (8th ed.). New York: Fairchild Books. ISBN 9781609015350.
 
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