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An Introduction
Who Did What?
Clothier
Woolstapler
Dyer
Willower
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Blender
Carder
Slubbing
Spinner
Quilley Winder
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Finishing
• Burler
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• Mender
• Fuller
• Tentering
• Raiser
• Shearer
• Presser
• Factor
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Shearer
After the cloth had been brushed to raise the nap using
handles of teasels, the piece of damp cloth passed to the shearman.
This very skilled man was able to shear the cloth by cutting
off all the very fine fibres which had been raised by the teasels.
He used a huge, heavy set of shears on a table with a curved
top. One blade of the shears remained still and the other was
pulled towards it by the shearman, helped by a wooden lever.
One piece of cloth took many hours to finish. In 1677, the shearman
earned 6 shillings a week.
The shears weighed 30 pounds , 14 kg, (shears did come in different weights)
and were ground to a fine edge. The first cut was called the kerf after which
the cloth was raised again and sheared again until the right finish was obtained.
When Arthur P Stancomb started his business in 1841, hand raising and shearing
was still common in Trowbridge.
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