The texture and feel of linen fabric
The glorious texture and feel of linen.

How do we get from flax to linen? Linen is grown from flax seeds, possible in most places but it thrives where river deposits replenish the soil each year. Sown predominantly in Belgium, France, Ireland, the Nile valley, the Baltic lands and the Netherlands around the end of March, these regions are where the silty soil and oceanic climate is ideal for the plant. This results in linen fibers that feel crisp, smooth, and airy in the final product.

It is a fast growing plant. Towards the end of the growing period, it will grow a full two inches per day. As it grows it has the color of sand on a cloudy day. At three months is when the flax plant first shows its true splendor, as it flowers and blooms and turns the fields into a light blue sea. The flax plants are a little over three feet tall at this point, with each stem carrying up to 100 flowers.

Flax fields in bloom

Whereas cotton, silk and wool are pretty much ready for spinning soon after growth, for a flax crop to be ready for basic spinning, some hard work has to happen. Pulling occurs about five weeks after flowering and is called "pulling" rather than harvesting because the flax is literally pulled out of the ground rather than cut down, in order to preserve the length of the fibers. The following procedures — stooking, rippling, retting, scutching, hackling, combing and spinning — all occur before weaving. Suffice it to say, these procedures are carefully and lovingly done by linen manufacturers and smaller cottage industries. Weaving is done where the art of weaving has been perfected over generations, with some linen manufacturers using textile mills, but also home looms.

Home loom weaving linen
The home grower of flax and making of linen as a cottage endeavor is followed all over the world in suitable climates. For more information on flax and growing, linen history and production, look at these two books: The Golden Thread: How Fabric Changed History by Kassia St. Clair and Fabric: The Hidden History of the Material World by Victoria Finlay.

Linen and Cotton — the Differences

Linen fabric detail
Cotton fabric detail

Both linen and cotton are prevalent especially in warm climates, where breathability is paramount. Both are thousands of years old, but linen dates from 26,000 years ago, while cotton dates from 6,000 years ago. In comparing cotton and linen:

Cotton is softer than linen at the outset but wears out sooner. Linen is rougher at the outset but softens with each wash and lasts a very long time. The quality of wicking in linen means it is eminently more comfortable in hot climates than cotton. The absorbability of linen is often overlooked until one uses linen towels — beautifully thin and packable, they are very appealing.

Effects of Growing Flax on the Environment

After years of being spurned by manmade fabrics or cotton, once again linen is being valued — and not only for fine fabrics. Flax is easier on the land:

It needs little irrigation — often none other than rainfall — and few pesticides and fertilizers. Crops are rotated. Flax captures significant amounts of carbon dioxide, often considered carbon-negative. Flax is close to zero waste: the long fibers are used for fine fabrics, the shorter tow fibers for insulation materials and industrial composites, and seeds are used for flaxseed oil or added to hot packs for skin. Untreated linen is biodegradable.

The Appeal of Linen

Linen garments in warm weather

There is no doubt that the appeal of linen is high in warm climates. That breathability and the wonderful feel in hot weather is accompanied with a more casual look. This is not a fabric lending itself to formal wear, nor is it conducive to wear in cold climates. Although there is an appeal to the casual nature of creased garments, frocks and shirts do also take well to the iron, still maintaining that casual and relaxed look.

Biblical Guidelines

Biblical text reference to linen

In the Bible we find a series of laws that delineate boundaries — clothing not made sha'atnez, with mixed fibers of wool and linen. The prohibition is mentioned in Deuteronomy and Leviticus. A garment of wool worn over a garment of linen is permitted, just not mixing the fibers into one garment. The possible origin of the prohibition is the symbolic mixing of the agricultural economy of Egypt with the pastoral economy of Jewish tribes. Today, some companies label compliant products with "sha'atnez-free" tags.

Linen Conferences, Biennale, Museums of Flax and Linen

Linen exhibition or museum

In exploring avenues for gatherings of lovers of linen, look for words such as biennale, textile, fiber art, conference. Ireland, Canada, USA, France, Italy, and Australia feature gatherings or museums inclusive of or devoted to flax and linen. It is no wonder that such conferences become more prevalent as the interest in all aspects of linen and flax grows.

Linen has walked the long centuries alongside mankind. In Europe and Western Asia, its cultivation reaches back thousands of years to the beginning of human settlement and farming. It powered the ships of ancient Greece and Troy; it is mentioned more than 80 times in the Old Testament. This is the fabric that wrapped the Dead Sea Scrolls to keep them safe down the centuries. — Haptic & Hue podcast

The Linen Closet

A linen closet

A linen closet is a dedicated, small storage space — typically featuring shelves rather than hanging rods — used for organizing bedding, towels, and household linens. Curiously, department stores often have "bed linen" departments, but this is because the term has endured. More often one is given many choices of cotton sheets, although high-end stores do sell fine linen for sheets. Likewise, most hotels use cotton sheets rather than linen, but luxury hotels do offer linen.

Thread Counts of Cotton and GSM of Linen

Linen fabric weights and textures

Whereas thread count in cotton sheets is an oft-quoted mark of quality, in linen the measurement is GSM (grams per square meter), also a measurement of heaviness. From the lightest of voiles through the fine handkerchief linens to the heaviest for upholstery, one consults the GSM — from as low as 70 GSM for sheer voile to sometimes more than 350 GSM for upholstery.

Sheer linen voile
The lightest sheer linen voile may have a GSM as low as 70.

With linen taking time and skills to produce, the prestige and pride of the manufacturers is accompanied by valued stamps of approval and certification. Various countries offer their linens as a cut above the rest. So whilst almost all flax is grown in Europe, linens from outside Europe may have manufacturing processes elsewhere — it is all linen, but there is definite consistency in high quality if purchasing Belgian or Irish linen, where flax to frock occurs all in one country.

Airing one's dirty linen never makes for a masterpiece. — François Truffaut

The saying "airing one's dirty linen" originates from the 19th-century French proverb, Il faut laver son linge sale en famille (One should wash one's dirty linen at home and keep one's problems at home), notably quoted by Napoleon Bonaparte in 1814, becoming a common English idiom by the 1860s.

The Colors of Linen

Natural earth tones of linen

There is enormous appeal for the natural, earth-toned linen colors.

Vibrant linen colors
Just look at these gorgeous lush colors, evocative of the brilliant hues of vibrant flowers.
Linen fabric detail
Linen fabric detail

Linen in Fashion

Men in linen suits at Milano Fashion Week

Whether it is the linen-suited men at Milano Fashion Week, with muted organic tones, or the jewel-toned linen of dowagers' frocks worn in warm climates, the attractiveness of linen is evident.

Linen fashion
Linen fashion
Open weave linen showing flax fibers
The beautiful open weave of linen with the highlighting of flax fibers displays the timeless appeal of linen.

About the Author: Jill Lowe →