Broken Twill Weave Fabric: A Unique and Versatile Texture

Explore the Beauty of Broken Twill: Fabric Properties and Applications

Apr 15 2025

Explore the Beauty of Broken Twill: Fabric Properties and Applications

Benefits of Using Twill Weave Fabric:

There are lots of benefits for using twill weave. Some important benefits of using twill weave fabric are given below.

  1. Durable: Twill fabric is very durable and can withstand a lot of wear, making it a great fabric for clothing and upholstery.
  2. Opaque: The twill weave fabric does not create a sheer quality, so all twill fabrics have great opacity, making them great for curtains, housewares, and clothing.
  3. Shows few wrinkles and creases: Twill fabric doesn’t wrinkle very easily because of the thickness of the material.
  4. Shows few stains: The direction of pattern helps hide dirt and stains from view, so spills at home or on clothes are disguised more easily.
  5. Drapes well: Twill fabric has a nice drape for clothing, sheets, and more.

What is Twill weave? Different types of Twill Weave Fabrics

When textiles are made on a weaving loom the vertical yarns and horizontal yarns interlace at an angle – this creates a particular pattern on the fabric. Twill weave is one of the many ways in which this is done. Twill fabrics have distinguishing diagonal patterns created by the particular type of weaving done on them.

Toggle

Why Herringbone Is a Pattern for the Ages

Although the name of the pattern has fishy origins—it was named after the skeleton of a herring, which it closely resembles—there’s nothing inelegant about herringbone. This fancy take on a twill has been a staple of sophisticated suiting since suits were invented, and everyone from Clark Gable to David Bowie has been seen sporting the look, which never goes out of style—King Charles has been wearing the same herringbone-patterned Anderson & Sheppard double-breasted overcoat since he was a prince in the ’80s. Ladies haven’t been left out of the action, either: see Diane Keaton and Chanel handbags. This enduring, durable pattern also makes particularly handsome upholstery fabric, which depending on the scale can skew old-school classic or new-school fun.

A pattern-rich corner of a room by designer Elizabeth Pash features a herringbone-upholstered armchair topped with a cozy throw in the same pattern. The curtains are in Schumacher’s Running Stitch in Blues.

Left Hand Twill

Left Hand Twill on a pair of Naked & Famous Left Hand Twill

Conversely, Left hand twill (LHT), or “S-twill”, is woven in the exact opposite direction as RHT, starting from the bottom right and moving up to the top left of the fabric.

Chhaya Mehrotra

Tegs: