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Twill Woven Shirt Fabric: Structure, Performance & Industrial Applications

Apr 14, 2026

In professional apparel manufacturing, the visible outer shell of a garment tells only half the story. Beneath collars, down plackets, and along cuffs, an engineered layer of twill woven shirt fabric works silently — providing structural support, body, and durability that consumers feel but rarely see. Understanding this fabric at a technical level is essential for designers, procurement managers, and production engineers who demand repeatable quality.

This article examines the construction, coating chemistry, fusing parameters, material compatibility, and industry applications of twill woven shirt fabric interlining, with particular focus on the Tricot Series produced by Jiaxing Rainbow (UBL) Interlining Co., Ltd. — one of China's leading interlining manufacturers with production facilities in Zhejiang, Jiangxi, and Bangladesh.


1. What Is Twill Woven Shirt Fabric Interlining?

Interlining is a composite textile layer fused or sewn between a garment's outer fabric (face) and lining. In shirt and tailored-jacket construction, it gives critical areas — collars, cuffs, fronts, and waistbands — the stiffness, hand-feel, and dimensional stability they require through repeated wearing and washing cycles.

The term twill woven describes a weave structure in which weft threads pass over and under multiple warp threads in a stepped, diagonal pattern, producing the characteristic diagonal rib. This geometry delivers inherent flexibility along the bias, better drape than plain weave, and a closer, more uniform surface ideal for adhesive bonding.

"The weave architecture of an interlining fabric is just as decisive as its adhesive chemistry — structure determines how stress is distributed across the fused composite."

Plain vs. Twill vs. Tricot: A Structural Comparison

Table 1 — Structural Comparison of Common Interlining Fabric Types
Fabric Type Weave / Construction Bias Stretch Surface Smoothness Typical Use
Plain Woven 1-over-1-under, no diagonal Low Moderate Shirt fronts, pockets, basic collars
Twill Woven Diagonal float, 2/1 or 3/1 repeat Medium High Suit fronts, jacket collars, waistbands
Tricot (Warp Knit) Weft-insertion warp knitting High Very High Stretch garments, overcoats, sleeves
Non-woven Random or layered fiber web, bonded Variable Low–Moderate Mass-market shirts, disposable applications

The woven interlining range at UBL includes Plain Fabric, Twill Fabric, Tricot Series, and Knitting Series — each tuned for specific garment types and outer-fabric pairings.

2. Construction: Yarn, Knitting Method & Finishing

2.1 Low-Elastic Semi-Gloss DTY Yarn

The base yarn used in UBL's Tricot / twill woven shirt fabric series is Draw Textured Yarn (DTY) processed to a low-elastic, semi-gloss specification. DTY is produced by simultaneously drawing and texturizing partially oriented polyester filaments, giving the yarn a fine, crimped character that balances softness with dimensional control. The semi-gloss finish — achieved through partial delustering — produces a subdued sheen suited to formal and professional garments where a flat, matte or excessively bright base would compromise the face fabric's aesthetic.

2.2 Weft-Insertion Warp Knitting

Rather than a traditional over-under weaving loom, the Tricot series employs weft-insertion warp knitting (WIWK). In this process, warp yarns form a stable chain loop structure while straight weft yarns are simultaneously inserted and locked in place — without interlacing. The result is a fabric with the dimensional stability of a woven construction and the crosswise stretch of a knit: crucial for garments that must conform to curved seams without buckling.

2.3 High-Temperature Dyeing

After construction, fabric rolls undergo high-temperature jet dyeing (typically 130 °C for polyester) under pressurized conditions. This process drives dye molecules into the fiber interior, achieving excellent colorfastness ratings (typically ISO 4 or above for wash and rubbing fastness). High-temperature processing also heat-sets the yarn's elastic memory, stabilizing the fabric dimensions against subsequent thermal exposure during garment fusing.

3. Double-Dot Coating Technology & PA Adhesive Chemistry

The adhesive coating is the most technically demanding step in interlining manufacturing. UBL's twill woven shirt fabric line uses an advanced double-dot coating system with high-performance PA (polyamide) adhesive powder.

3.1 How Double-Dot Coating Works

In a double-dot (also called scatter-dot or gravure-scatter) process, a gravure roll prints a first layer of paste dots onto the base fabric. A second, finer scatter of PA powder dots is then applied on top of the first layer — creating a two-layer adhesive architecture. When heat and pressure are applied during garment pressing, these layered dots melt, flow, and form a mechanically interlocked bond with the outer fabric's fiber structure.

The bi-layer arrangement distributes bonding stress more evenly than a single-layer coating, reducing the risk of delamination under repeated flexing and washing. It also allows precise control of the total add-on weight (g/m²) without concentrating adhesive in large continuous patches that could create a stiff "hand" feel.

3.2 Why Polyamide (PA) Adhesive?

Polyamide adhesives are selected for shirt and tailored-garment interlinings because they offer a lower activation temperature than polyethylene (PE) alternatives, a flexible bond line after cooling, and superior resistance to both aqueous laundering and dry-cleaning solvents. PA adhesives are compatible with a broad range of outer-fabric fiber types, including natural cellulosics (cotton, viscose) and synthetic filaments (polyester), making them the industry standard for premium woven interlining.

Table 2 — Adhesive Powder Comparison: PA vs. PE vs. Co-PA
Property PA (Polyamide) PE (Polyethylene) Co-PA (Copolyamide)
Activation temperature 120–150 °C 140–160 °C 100–130 °C
Bond flexibility High Medium Very High
Wash resistance Excellent Good Excellent
Dry-clean resistance Excellent Fair Good
Typical garment segment Tailoring, shirts, suits Casual outerwear Stretch / performance wear

4. Fusing Conditions: Temperature, Time & Pressure

Correct fusing parameters are essential. Under-fusing results in weak adhesion and early delamination; over-fusing can scorch the face fabric, drive adhesive bleed-through, or permanently alter the garment's hand. UBL specifies the following standard conditions for the H4010 and H4012 grades:

Table 3 — Standard Fusing Parameters for UBL Twill Woven Shirt Fabric Series
Parameter Value / Range Notes
Fusing Temperature 120 – 140 °C Upper platen; adjust for face-fabric heat sensitivity
Fusing Time 12 – 15 seconds Continuous-belt press recommended
Pressure 1.5 – 2.5 kg/cm² Even pressure critical; verify platen calibration
Cool-down Lay flat, allow 30 s before handling Prevents bond distortion while adhesive re-solidifies
Production Note: Because outer fabrics in garment manufacturing vary widely in fiber content, weave density, and finish, UBL recommends conducting bond-strength and wash-resistance tests on representative fabric / interlining / machine combinations before committing to full-run production.

5. Full Product Specification Matrix — Tricot Series 4

UBL's Tricot Series 4 comprises an extensive range of weights and yarn specifications to serve diverse garment categories. The table below summarizes the core product matrix, all manufactured at 60 inches (152 cm) width with 100% polyester or polyester-viscose blended base cloth:

Table 4 — UBL Tricot Series 4: Product Specification Summary
Product Code Weight (g/m²) Base Cloth Composition Weaving Spec Coating Width
H4010 65 100% Polyester 45s 58×50 Double Dot PA 60"
H4012 84 100% Polyester 45s 80×60 Double Dot PA 60"
H4020 36 100% Polyester 40×75 Double Dot PA 60"
H4021 40 100% Polyester 40×120 Double Dot PA 60"
H4022 47 100% Polyester 40×150 Double Dot PA 60"
H4025 58 100% Polyester 40×150 Double Dot PA 60"
H4600 85 65% Polyester / 35% Viscose Double Dot PA 60"
H4730 70 65% Polyester / 35% Viscose Double Dot PA 60"
H4733 100 65% Polyester / 35% Viscose Double Dot PA 60"
H4737 140 65% Polyester / 35% Viscose Double Dot PA 60"
H4502.M 33 100% Polyester Double Dot PA 60"
H4509.HH 76 100% Polyester Double Dot PA 60"

Weights ranging from 31 g/m² (H4308K, ultra-light shirt fronts) to 140 g/m² (H4737, heavy structured overcoats) give designers and production engineers fine-grained control over the finished garment's hand and drape.

6. Material Compatibility & Garment Applications

One of the principal advantages of the PA double-dot system is its broad fiber compatibility. The Twill Woven Shirt Fabric bonds reliably to:

Natural Cotton & Cotton Blends

Provides crisp structure to dress shirt fronts, collar stands, and cuffs without compromising breathability.

Polyester & Polyester-Cotton

Delivers dimensional stability to synthetic fabrics used in performance shirts and uniform garments.

Polyester-Viscose Blends

Adds body to semi-stretch fabrics common in premium unlined suits and tailored blouses.

Wool & Wool Blends

Supports collar and lapel roll without adhesive bleed-through — critical in high-end suiting.

Garment Area Applications

Table 5 — Recommended Interlining Grades by Garment Area
Garment Area Recommended Weight Range Key Performance Requirement Typical Product Codes
Shirt Front (placket) 36–47 g/m² Clean button-line, wash stability H4020, H4021, H4022
Collar & Collar Stand 47–65 g/m² Shape retention, firmness H4022K, H4025, H4010
Cuffs 52–84 g/m² Crease recovery, abrasion resistance H4315K, H4012
Jacket Front Panel 65–100 g/m² Drape, chest roll, peel strength H4010, H4730, H4733
Waistband 84–140 g/m² Anti-stretch, dimensional stability H4600, H4737
Pocket Reinforcement 31–40 g/m² Lightweight, prevents bag distortion H4308K, H4020

7. Care, Handling & Storage Guidelines

Maintaining interlining performance from warehouse to finished garment requires attention at every handling stage:

Cutting

Use sharp rotary or straight-blade cutters. Avoid stretching the roll during lay-up; fabric warp direction should remain consistent with garment grain.

Washing

After fusing, the composite fabric withstands standard domestic machine washing at 40 °C and professional dry cleaning using perchloroethylene or hydrocarbon solvents.

Ironing

Use low-to-medium temperature settings (cotton program with steam only for face fabrics that permit it). Avoid direct high-heat iron contact with the interlining side.

Storage

Store rolls horizontally on padded racks or vertically in temperature-controlled rooms (15–25 °C, RH 50–65%). Avoid compression, UV exposure, and proximity to solvents.

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