She's jamming it into every spot she can on the exterior walls but on the interior of my placeAm I right to tell her that she needs to cover it with plastic? I don't want this stuff to become airborne and end up in my lungsShe's not even using new insulationIt's very old and some of it is yellowAny advice would be great! Thanks
The pink stuff is safe, it is just fiber glass spun the same way they spin out cotton candyIt will make you itchy to the touch, and while handling it you should have a face mask, not any more than you should wear a face mask while cutting wood and the airborne particlesNow stuffing it into every space is not a good practice, it needs to be fluffy to work as an insulation, but I suppose anything is better than nothing.
The word ''textile'' originally applied only to woven fabrics, now generally applied to fibers, yarns, or fabrics or products made offers, yarns or fabricsThe term textile originates from the latin verb texere to weave but, as the Textile Institute's Terms and Definitions Glossary explains, it is now ''a general term applied to any manufacture from fibers, filaments or yarns characterized by flexibility, fineness and high ratio of Length to thickness'' Textiles, especially fabrics the fundamental component of a ready made garment, because it is the basic raw material of a garmentSo it is important to know the manufacturing sequence of fabric from fiberThe quality product is the main goal at present time, Without knowledge of Textile manufacturing i.efiber, yarn and fabrics it is impossible to maintain the quality of a garmentBefore elaborating on whole process of grey fabric manufacturing Let us look on what is textile fiber, yarn and fabric and what are the process flow chart of Textile Manufacturing can be describedNormally, textile is a woven fabric; now applied generally to any one of the following: 1.Staple fibers and filaments suitable for conversion to or use as yarns, or for the preparation of woven, knit, or nonwoven fabrics2Yarns made from natural or manufactured fibers3Fabrics and other manufactured products made from fibers as defined above and from yarns4Garments and other articles fabricated from fibers, yarns, or fabrics when the products retain the characteristic flexibility and drape of the original fabrics.