American Woolen Co. From wool to cloth
1911
self-published / Boston MA
Belding Bros. & Co., 1925 ?
Belding Bros. & Co. Silk culture and manufacturing shown progressively
1925 ?
self-published / Northhampton , MA
pg 44
Twister. Twisting new warp threads onto the corresponding old ones.
Proximity Manufacturing Co.- Cone Mills, 1925
Proximity Manufacturing Co.- Cone Mills World leadership in Denim through 30 years of progress
1925>
self-published / Greensboro NC
Ludlow Manufacturing Associates, 1928
Ludlow Manufacturing Associates Jute: An account of its growth and manufacture
1928
self-published / Ludlow MA
Photograhs: Johnston and Hoffman
pg. 44
Drumming jute.
1. The jute is laid on the floor in a rectangular mat, the fibres lying across the width.
2. The mat of jute with the ends turned over is rolled up from one end as shown here and ropes are placed around it to hold it in position.
3. The completed drum ready for the market.
Working. Large cones or tubes of yarn are placed in the creel of the warper and run onto a beam like those shown in the background shown in the back ground.
The Viscose Company, 1929
The Viscose Company The story of rayon
1929
self-published / New York, NY
pg. 34
The annular cakes of thread taken from the spinning machines are wound into skeins of definite lengths
Callaway Mills, 1939
Callaway Mills The story of cotton
1939
self-published / LaGrange , GA
Photographer: Bessie Callaway
Into the gin. Here the cotton first meets the pneumatic suction which carries it through the ginning operation. More gins are so efficient and automatic that the cotton is rarely touched by human hands...
Callaway Mills, 1939
Callaway Mills The story of cotton
1939
self-published / LaGrange , GA
Photographer: Bessie Callaway
Pepperell Manufacturing Company, 1943
Pepperell Manufacturing Company People of peace at war
1943
self-published / Boston MA
pg. 1
For twenty five Mrs. Laura Bergeron has been a weaver in Pepperell mills working on peacetime fabrics. Now her highly skilled hands help to weave essential airplane fabrics...
Pond Lily Company, 1943
Pond Lily Company The story of our American business
John Francis Welch
1943
self-published / New Haven CN
Reliance Manufacturing, 1944
Reliance Manufacturing Meet the parachute
O.J. Mink
1944
self-published / Chicago, IL
pg. 90
Sewing the colored aerial delivery chute.
American Felt Company, 1946
American Felt Company The story of felt
1946
self-published / Glenville, CN
pg. 34
Hydro-extracting-After scouring and neutralization, the felt is hydro-extracted to remove residual water, prior to final drying in forced convection hot air dryers.
American Felt Company, 1946
American Felt Company The story of felt
1946
self-published / Glenville, CN
pg. 44
Exemplified by this completely automatic press, Cutting Divisions located at Glenville, Conn., New York, Detroit, Michigan and San Francisco, California afford the finest modern equipment for the precision cutting and fabrication of felt.
American Lace Manufacturers Association Leavers Lace; A handbook of the American leavers lace industry
Vittoria Rosatto
1950
self-published
pg.102
Punching jacquard cards
Saco-Lowell Shops, 1953
Saco-Lowell Shops
Silver Anniversary Bulletin 1953
1953
self-published / Boston MA
M. Lowenstein & Sons Inc, 1955
M. Lowenstein & Sons Inc The Lowenstein story
1955
self-published / New York NY
Native Laces, 1968
Native Laces Legacy in lace
Leon Birnbaum
1968
self-published / ?
pg. 80
On a leavers machine fine nylon yarn must be wound into thin brass bobbins. It takes twenty of these bobbins for one inch on the machine. Would you believe that approximately 150 yards of fine nylon yarn is inserted in each of these bobbins.