Photo acknowledgements
 
 
 
Ikat

(n) -- a term adopted from the Malay word “menikat,” which means “to bind, tie or wrap around” – is known in Thai as “mud mii.”

An ancient art found in many cultures, the process involves dyeing only certain segments of the yarn, achieved by first wrapping those parts that are to remain undyed.

   
Loom (n) -- a frame or machine for interlacing at right angles two or more sets of threads or yarns to form a cloth
   
Menikat (n) -- see Ikat
   
Mud Mii   (n) -- see Ikat
   
Reeling (v) -- process by which a special device is used to locate the end of a filament on a cocoon, after which it must be carefully unwound
   
Shuttles (n)
   
Sleying (v) -- the process of pulling each individual warp yarn between the fine teeth of a metal comb
   
Spinning Wheel (n) -- instrument used for unwinding dyed skeins of thread onto to big bobbins for the warping process
   
Warp (n) -- the length-wise thread of a woven material; a series of yarns extended lengthwise in a loom and crossed by the woof
   
Weft (n) -- a yarn used for the woof
   
Weft-knitted

(adj) -- produced in machine knitting with the yarns running crosswise or in a circle

   
Woof (n) -- a filling thread or yarn in weaving

Sources:
Webster’s Ninth New Collegiate Dictionary
Jim Thompson, The Thai Silk Sketch Book