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Alpaca Fiber 101
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Alpaca Fiber from the Textile Point of View
Author: Mike Safley
Once alpaca fleece is in the bag, what is it worth? The textile
manufacturer could not care less whether the fleece available for sale
came from a prize winning stud or the herd's ugly duckling.
Understanding what qualities the buyer desires most is the key to
getting maximum value from alpaca fiber production. All natural fiber
falls into one of two categories, carpet or apparel. Carpet is coarse,
apparel is fine. Apparel fiber is more scarce than carpet fiber and
sells for considerably more money per unit of measurement on the
international market. The textile market is dominated by sheep wool.
All other animal fiber, including alpaca, is known as specialty fiber.
The results of processing trials conducted by fiber experts Bray, Long,
and Van Bergen rated mean fiber diameter as the most important quality
of sheep wool immediately affecting its value for manufacturing
purposes. Their studies rated the relative value given to various fiber
properties as follows: Relative Importance
| Property* |
Study 1 |
Study 2 |
| Fineness (mean fiber diameter) |
65% |
80% |
| Length |
15% |
15-20% |
| Tensile Strength |
10% |
Only important when present or absent to an abnormal degree |
| Remaining properties |
10% |
| * Color was not considered in these studies |
According to Van Bergen and Lang, the reason fineness impacts price
is due to its effect on a yarn's spinning limit, which means that, at
any given count of yarn, the finer the fiber, the greater number of
fibers in a cross section. This, in turn, leads to a more uniform yarn
diameter, greater yarn strength, and greater softness of handle. Soft
garments which can be worn next to the skin are most expensive.
Cashmere, with its soft, seductive feel, sells for high dollars in
exclusive shops. Why is cashmere always soft and wool often itchy?
Fiber fineness. Over 30% of American consumers surveyed claimed to be
allergic to wool. These same people can wear cashmere or alpaca with no
adverse reaction. The International Wool Secretariat and CSIRO, the
Australian research organization, with its wool technology and animal
production divisions, were extremely concerned by the perception that
wool commonly caused allergic reactions. Extensive research has
identified the cause of the allergic reactions in consumers who wore
wool. The research began by administering common tests for allergic
reactions. This involved grinding wool to a fine consistency,
suspending it in liquid, spreading it on the allergic consumers and
pricking the skin with a needle. The result was that consumers,
originally thought to be allergic to wool, didn't react. What was
finally found to be the cause of this so-called allergic reaction to
wool? Fiber diameter. The prickle factor was guilty; the coarser the
fiber, the more severe the allergic reaction. Researchers found that
coarse hairs extending from the yarn or fabric prick the skin and
stimulate the pain receptors, thereby causing redness, irritation, and
itching. Once fiber diameter was identified as the culprit, studies
were done to decide at what mean diameter prickle occurred. Fiber that
averages 21 microns or less tends to be soft to the touch. Fiber with a
coarse edge over 30 microns almost always itches. Yarns that contain
more than 5% fiber over 30 microns create garments that only fleas
could love. Consumers, who previously claimed to be allergic to wool,
experience no negative reactions as long as the average micron count of
the garment they are wearing does not exceed 21. Further research has
conclusively proven that any fabric which is made of any fiber
(man-made acrylic, hair from cashmere goats, etc.) averaging more than
21 microns causes pain on the skin and a so-called allergic reaction
(see the attached diagram).Alpaca is no exception. Coarse alpaca
itches. Fine alpaca feels smooth and silky next to the skin. That's why
fiber diameter is by far and away the most dominate value affecting
fiber prices. Bruce McGregor is a senior scientist with the Victorian
Department of Agriculture in Australia, specializing in improving the
production and quality of specialty animal fibers. He wrote an
extensive article for Alpacas Australia (issue 13, 1995) entitled
Alpaca Fleece Development and Methods of Assessing Fibre Quality. His
article ranked, in order of importance, the qualities of alpaca fleece
that processors have valued over many years, as follows: Fiber diameter Fiber length Fiber color Freedom from contamination Degree
of medulation McGregor does not include tensile strength as a quality
affecting value. The strength of alpaca fiber is so superior to other
natural fibers, such as wool, that it is not considered an issue in
pricing. Alpaca fiber's staple length is important. Length commands a
premium in the market. This is because length increases the
manufacturers' ability to spin finer and stronger yarns for weaving.
But McGregor still concludes that Markets usually discriminate against
length to a lesser degree than fiber diameter. The best way to increase
uniformity is to reduce the average micron count. A finer fleece has
less standard deviation. This is just another reason why micron count
is the primary determinate of a fiber sale price. Another reason for
fiber diameter to be the dominate value is that the fiber diameter
distribution (FDD) cannot be accurately measured on large sale lots.
There is too much variability from one fleece to the next. Furthermore,
textile manufacturers almost always combine fiber from several lots to
make tops. They purposely mix fiber with various micron counts,
strength, and length to create a top that meets a certain
specification. Finally, the cost of measuring standard deviation in
large lots is prohibitive. There is considerable research which
establishes the fact that a more uniform fleece is more spinnable. A
fleece with a co-efficient of variation that is 5% less than a fleece
of comparable micron will spin a yarn that performs as if the fleece is
one micron finer. The most dramatic evidence of the influence of micron
count on price was the million dollar bale sale which occurred at the
annual Australian wool sale. Each kilogram in this one bale of sheep
fleece sold for $10,030 Australian. The entire bale made up of 100
kilos of fine merino sheep wool sold to a Japanese textile manufacturer
for $1,030,000. The fleece, the finest sheep wool ever tested, averaged
13.8 microns.
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