Printed fabrics
Jacquard refers to textiles in which yarns are interwoven according to different movement rules to form patterns during the fabric making process. The yarns are interwoven to form patterns. The changes in yarn colors and the coordination of different yarn movement rules produce different color blocks. The patterns that appear are mixed colors, three-dimensional, and have a textured feel.
Printed fabrics are fabrics with printed patterns applied with pigments or dyes, and are flat.
Embroidered fabrics
Embroidered fabrics are highly artistic patterned fabrics. Their needlework is varied, non-directional, and the use of colors is free. Jacquard fabrics rely on warp and weft yarns to show color, and the yarns are arranged regularly. They rely on different organizations to produce limited color blocks, and the number of colors is limited.
Burnt fabrics
Burnt fabrics are textiles that use acid pulp to burn out the cotton fibers in polyester-cotton core-spun yarns or polyester-cotton blended fabrics to show transparent patterns. They can also be used on fabrics woven from silk and rayon to burn out rayon to present thin and transparent patterns.