Cotton field at Manavgat at full flower
- Written by Portal Editor
Every year there are several thousand tourists who combine their vacation in Turkey with the purchase of still cheaper textiles.
If the numbers are also declining due to cheaper offers in Europe, one can still speak of Turkish textile tourism, which is caused on the one hand by the wage gap in production but also in the raw material supply. A large part of the cotton required for textile production is also produced in Turkey. Sometimes there are small fields belonging to private cotton farmers that are laboriously harvested by hand, but there are mainly fields that are processed on a large scale.
Cotton - a natural product for centuries
The use of cotton was known much earlier, so today it is certain that the Egyptians used cotton for the production of light clothing around 12,000 years ago. In ancient Babylon, cotton was so important that it was called white gold. Finds of clothing in caves in Mexico indicate an age of more than 7,000 years.
Cotton as a luxury good - more expensive than silk
Up until the 16th century, cotton was a luxury item that was usually more expensive than silk. The reasons for this were simply the high labor costs involved in removing the seed pods from the cotton and the tedious carding, aligning the loose fibers into a pile. Compared to sheep's wool, but also to silk, cotton has a disadvantage that required a lot of work due to the very short fiber lengths. Historical records show that it took 13 working days to produce just one pound of workable cotton thread, compared to just 6 working days for a comparable quantity of silk thread. It only took two to five working days to produce the same amount of thread from linen and only two working days for virgin wool. Even with the beginning of technical industrialization in England, which used Indian cotton due to its colonial policy, English spinners around 1750 were not able to spin cotton threads that were strong enough to produce pure cotton textiles. This art was still reserved for the Indians.
Cotton harvest by seasonal workers
Cotton doesn't scratch
Fortunately, more and more people are also looking for 100% pure cotton fibers when buying their textiles, which are also labeled accordingly due to legal regulations. Whether it's underwear, socks, trousers or sweaters, your body will thank you.
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