Close Menu
NERDBOT
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
    Subscribe
    NERDBOT
    • News
      • Reviews
    • Movies & TV
    • Comics
    • Gaming
    • Collectibles
    • Science & Tech
    • Culture
    • Nerd Voices
    • About Us
      • Join the Team at Nerdbot
    NERDBOT
    Home»Technology»Business»The Most Waterproof Natural Cloth in the World – and Why the Law Made It That Way
    Waterproof Natural Cloth
    Business

    The Most Waterproof Natural Cloth in the World – and Why the Law Made It That Way

    Hassan JavedBy Hassan JavedMay 5, 20264 Mins Read
    Share
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest Reddit WhatsApp Email

    There is a simple test for Harris Tweed. Take a piece of the cloth and push a pencil through it. The yarns give way to let the pencil pass – and then, when you remove it, they settle back. The cloth es behind the pencil as if it was never there. The yarns do not break. They simply accommodate, and return.

    This is not a party trick. It is a demonstration of what happens when a cloth is made correctly, from the right material, without chemical interference. And it tells you something important about why Harris Tweed performs the way it does in wet weather.

    THE LANOLIN QUESTION

    Harris Tweed is arguably the most waterproof natural and untreated cloth available. That claim rests on something specific: the Harris Tweed Act of 1993 – the only piece of legislation in the world that protects a cloth – restricts the use of chemicals in Harris Tweed’s production. Most commercial textile processing strips the natural oils from wool to make it easier to dye and treat. Harris Tweed is not processed that way.

    The result is a cloth that retains a far greater concentration of lanolin – the natural, waxy oil found in sheep’s wool that evolved, over millennia, precisely to shed water. Lanolin is not added to Harris Tweed. It is simply not removed.

    HOW IT WORKS IN PRACTICE

    Harris Tweed is heavier than most tweeds – typically 470 to 500 grammes per running metre, with specialist shooting cloths for gamekeepers running to 700 grammes. The combination of weight and lanolin creates a cloth with specific weather behaviour: when rain hits those large, oily threads, they expand slightly to close any gaps and keep moisture out. When the cloth dries, the threads contract and allow air to pass through, so the cloth breathes.

    This is passive, structural waterproofing – no coating, no membrane, no treatment that washes out after a season. The performance is in the cloth itself, not applied to its surface.

    THE REAL-WORLD COMPARISON

    Anyone who has spent time outdoors in Harris Tweed in genuinely wet conditions will tell you the same thing. It does not perform like a wax jacket – which is heavier, less breathable, and degrades without reproofing. It does not perform like modern technical shooting clothing, which achieves similar waterproofing but at a significant environmental cost in production. Harris Tweed performs like what it is: a cloth that evolved over centuries in one of the wettest places in Northern Europe, worn by people who worked outside and could not afford to be wet.

    The Outer Hebrides, where every piece of Harris Tweed is still handwoven under the terms of the 1993 Act, sit on the far north-western edge of Europe. The weather that arrives there from the Atlantic is unforgiving. The cloth the islanders wove – and still weave, on treadle-driven looms in their own homes, without electricity – was built for that reality. It was not designed in a laboratory. It was refined by use.

    WHY IT STILL MATTERS

    The practical waterproofing of Harris Tweed is not an argument against modern technical clothing. It is an argument for understanding what natural materials, produced correctly, can genuinely do – and for recognising that the Harris Tweed Act of 1993 has preserved a cloth performance that would otherwise have been engineered away in pursuit of lower production costs and lighter weights.

    At Walker Slater, our Harris Tweed jackets and coats are cut to be worn as the cloth was intended – outside, in the kind of weather Scotland reliably provides. The cloth arrives from the mills of Stornoway with its lanolin intact and its properties unchanged. What you wear is what the Hebridean weavers made.

    Discover ourHarris Tweed coats and jackets at Walker Slater. 

    Do You Want to Know More?

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Email
    Previous ArticleWhy Businesses Still Need Tax Consultants in Dubai in 2026
    Next Article Online Gaming and the Future of Entertainment: A New Digital Era
    Hassan Javed

    Related Posts

    Why Markets Are Waiting for Signals from Central Banks Before the Next Move — Analysis by Richmond365

    April 14, 2026

    Nintendo Initiates Lawsuit Over Trump Tariffs

    March 6, 2026
    Why Are Your Instagram Views Not Increasing

    Why Are Your Instagram Views Not Increasing? Here’s the Real Reason

    February 12, 2026
    Why Real-Time Asset Visibility is the Most Important Tech Investment for 2026

    EU Ecology Services Ltd Aligns Sustainability Operations with Long-Term Business Stability

    February 5, 2026

    Demolition Work in Dubai, Safe, Licensed & Professional Services

    February 5, 2026

    SEO Kuala Lumpur for B2B: Building Pipeline With High-Intent Keywords and Authority Content

    February 5, 2026
    • Latest
    • News
    • Movies
    • TV
    • Reviews
    Why Some People Feel More Alone After Big Personal Milestones

    Why Some People Feel More Alone After Big Personal Milestones

    May 19, 2026
    The New Conversation Around Sobriety-Friendly Social Events

    The New Conversation Around Sobriety-Friendly Social Events

    May 19, 2026
    Why First-Time Homebuyers Are Using AI to See Past Outdated Interiors

    Why First-Time Homebuyers Are Using AI to See Past Outdated Interiors

    May 19, 2026
    Why IDC Socket Choices Fail After Mass Production

    Why IDC Socket Choices Fail After Mass Production

    May 19, 2026

    A24 Secures Global Rights to “Club Kid” After Cannes Bidding War

    May 18, 2026

    Julianne Moore Honored at Kering Women in Motion Awards at Cannes

    May 18, 2026

    Keanu Reeves Set to Voice Lead in Stop-Motion Samurai Film “Hidari”

    May 18, 2026

    “Sonic 4” Wraps Production, Metal Sonic Finally Revealed

    May 18, 2026
    "Obsession," 2026

    Curry Barker Want to Turn “Obsession” Into an Anthology Series

    May 18, 2026

    Keanu Reeves Set to Voice Lead in Stop-Motion Samurai Film “Hidari”

    May 18, 2026

    “Sonic 4” Wraps Production, Metal Sonic Finally Revealed

    May 18, 2026
    "Hope," 2026

    Na Hong-jin Cosmic Creature Feature “Hope” Gets Teaser Trailer

    May 18, 2026

    Netflix Officially Greenlit “Barbaric” Fantasy Series

    May 14, 2026

    Larry David Asks Obama to Be His Emergency Contact in New HBO Teaser

    May 12, 2026

    Ryan Coogler’s X-Files Reboot with Amy Madigan, Steve Buscemi, Ben Foster and More

    May 11, 2026

    “Saturday Night Live UK” Gets Second Season Renewal

    May 8, 2026
    Is God Is

    “Is God Is” Vengeance, Violence and Voice to Black Rage [review]

    May 17, 2026

    “Mortal Kombat 2” Slight Improvement But No Flawless Victory

    May 8, 2026
    How Lucky Am I by Christian Watson

    “How Lucky Am I” by Christian Watson is a Must Read During Hard Times

    May 7, 2026

    “The Devil Wears Prada 2” A Passible Legacy Sequel, That’s All (review)

    May 2, 2026
    Check Out Our Latest
      • Product Reviews
      • Reviews
      • SDCC 2021
      • SDCC 2022
    Related Posts

    None found

    NERDBOT
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
    Nerdbot is owned and operated by Nerds! If you have an idea for a story or a cool project send us a holler on Editors@Nerdbot.com

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.