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| Material: | 85% Polyester, 12% Polyamide, 3% Elastane |
| Width (cm): | 150 |
| Grammage (g/m²): | 280 |
| Features: | Soft |
| Application / Use: | Chairs, Armchairs, Pants, Overshirts, Cushions |
| Manufacturing Method: | Single-sided digital textile printing, all products are custom-made to order. |
| Care: |
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| Notices: |
IMPORTANTE: plazo de recepción de tela base previsto para el 15 de Febrero, todos los pedidos previos de Enero y Febrero se expedirán a partir de esa fecha. |
The Velvety Corduroy - Dublin is a corduroy type fabric, composed of 85% polyester, 12% polyamide, and 3% elastane. With a weight of 280 gr/m2 and a width of 150 cm, its plain color printed in deep rose and mauve features a Cyan ink of 16, a Magenta ink of 53, a Yellow ink of 5, and a Black ink of 0, resulting in a CMYK of 16 53 5 0. The deep mauve color represents creativity, intuition, and imagination, and combines particularly well with light tones such as pink, white, or beige.
It is important to note that the base fabric is printed with the plain color on one side using digital textile printing, which means it is not a dyed fabric but printed on one side. The fabric is characterized by being soft to the touch and having a unique visual sheen.
Furthermore, the Velvety Corduroy - Dublin is primarily used for decoration and upholstery of chairs, armchairs, sofas, cushions, baskets, and fashion accessories such as trousers, overshirts, blazers, jackets, vests, bags, and backpacks. Its use is ideal in the winter season.
To keep the fabric in good condition and preserve its shine and softness, it is important to follow specific care instructions such as do not bleach, wash at maximum temperatures of 30 degrees Celsius, do not dry clean (except with trichloroethylene), iron at cold temperatures, and do not tumble dry.
The printing technology used for this fabric is sublimation (polyester), which allows for high-quality and durable printing. This process consists of obtaining a print with special inks that turn into gas upon contact with the heat of a synthetic substrate, such as polyester, adhering permanently to the fabric.