Close Menu
Indian Textile Journal
  • Home
  • Market and Economy
    • Apparels & Garments
    • Fibres & Raw Materials
    • Home Textiles
    • Industry Update
  • Textile Machinery
    • Allied Equipment and Accessories
    • Automation
    • Dyeing, Processing & Finishing
    • Knitting
    • Printing
    • Spinning
    • Weaving
  • Tech Textiles
  • Sustainability
  • Resources
    • Trade Fair
    • Events
    • Videos
  • Interview & Opinion
  • Subscribe Now
  • Advertise
  • Digital
Facebook X (Twitter) YouTube LinkedIn
Indian Textile Journal
Epson
  • Home
  • Market and Economy
    • Apparels & Garments
    • Fibres & Raw Materials
    • Home Textiles
    • Industry Update
  • Textile Machinery
    • Allied Equipment and Accessories
    • Automation
    • Dyeing, Processing & Finishing
    • Knitting
    • Printing
    • Spinning
    • Weaving
  • Tech Textiles
  • Sustainability
  • Resources
    • Trade Fair
    • Events
    • Videos
  • Interview & Opinion
  • Subscribe Now
  • Advertise
  • Digital
Indian Textile Journal
Home » Versatile machines from Dornier
Industry Update

Versatile machines from Dornier

By April 6, 20182 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter LinkedIn WhatsApp Copy Link

DORNIER will be represented at the ITM textile machinery trade fair from April 14 – 17 in Istanbul. Besides denim, wool and carpets, in Turkey the machine builder‘s weaving machines are also used to produce technical textiles.

“Clothing and home textiles are produced in Turkey on weaving machines from DORNIER by tradition”, says Wolfgang Schöffl, Head of Business Unit Weaving Machines at Lindauer DORNIER GmbH (LiDO). The machines are used to make fabrics for furnishings, curtains and hand towels, for example. But recently technical textiles have also begun to make an appearance in the product portfolios of Turkish weaving houses. The volume is still modest, but it is growing. Technical textiles as a market of the future for Turkish weavers? “It will happen”, Schöffl is convinced, as he sees the classic local textile industry responding to cheaper competition from India and China.

Technical textiles are generally considered to be growth market with enormous potential. Powerful industries such as aero-space, the automobile industry, wind energy and medicine all drive a steadily increasing demand. This has also been confirmed in a study conducted by the Swiss business consultancy Gherzi and commissioned by the European Apparel and Textile Confederation Euratex at the request of the EU Commission: The study found that the global market for technical textiles (including non-wovens) will experience annual growth rates of 5 – 6 per cent and will reach a volume of almost $200 billion by 2020 ($2014: 147 billion).

But the initial obstacles for weavers who want to break into the technical textiles market – often while still producing home and garment fabrics – are formidable. The standards of design and aesthetics are replaced almost entirely by function and quality. Companies intending to manufacture airbags, parachutes, filters or tirecord must have weaving machines that satisfy the highest quality standards. “Either the material is flawless – or it is useless; there is no second-quality category in technical weaving”, says Schöffl. And this is precisely why every weaving machine built by the technology leader DORNIER conforms to all major manufacturing criteria such as lowest warp and filling thread breakage rates, processing of various materials, high machine speeds and reproducible machine settings with consistent weaving quality.

“With our rapier and air-jet weaving machines, we intend to make it possible for the weaver to achieve the highest possible production reliability for technical weaving as well”, explains Schöffl.

Previous ArticleJust a few clicks to a perfect fitting!
Next Article Innovation for aircraft seating

Related Posts

PDS earns Great Place to Work recognition in 10 countries

June 2, 2026

Turkmenistan sees focus on high-tech Italian textile machinery

May 29, 2026

RIICO begins plot allotment at Rupaheri Textile Park in Bhilwara

May 18, 2026
Recent Posts
  • Trützschler IDF 3 unlocks short fibre processing potential
  • World Environment Day 2026 – 5 wardrobe choices combining style and sustainability
  • MiRooh unveils cosmic candy bedroom collection
  • CMAI hosts AI Masterclass to guide clothing businesses into the digital era
  • PDS earns Great Place to Work recognition in 10 countries
  • NITMA welcomes cotton import duty waiver
  • Cotton imports exempted from customs duty
  • Trident Group and ICAR-NINFET explore tie-up for natural fibre home textiles
Facebook X (Twitter) YouTube LinkedIn
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions

SISTER PUBLICATIONS

Construction World Equipment India Industrial Product Finder Infrastructure Today

© 2026 Indian Textile Journal. All Rights Reserved.

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