Acrylic yarn has become a popular choice in the field of textile customization due to its excellent dyeing performance and bright and full colors. Customers can usually choose their own colors according to their needs, but in the actual customization process, there are several limitations due to factors such as yarn characteristics, production processes, and costs, which require comprehensive consideration and reasonable planning.
1、 Feasibility basis for color self selection
The molecular structure of acrylic fiber contains polar cyanide groups, which are easy to bind with cationic dyes. It has a wide chromatographic coverage, from basic black and white gray to bright red, blue, and fluorescent colors. Customers can specify colors in three ways:
Color card reference: Provide standardized color codes such as PANTONE and national standard color cards, and manufacturers can use them to mix dyes;
Physical sample reference: Provide physical samples of fabrics, yarns, etc., and the manufacturer analyzes the color composition through a spectrometer;
Numerical parameters: Provide RGB and CMYK values (note the color difference between the screen display and actual dyeing).
The manufacturer will first make a small sample (50-100g) for customer confirmation, adjust it correctly, and then mass produce to ensure that the color meets expectations.
2、 The core limitations of customized colors
Although choosing colors is feasible, the following factors may limit the customization range:
1. Differences in color fastness and stability
There are significant differences in color fastness to light, washing, and rubbing among different colors
Dark color series (black, navy blue, deep red): dye adsorption is firm, wash fastness can reach 4-5 levels (up to 5 levels), and stability is good;
Light colored series (light pink, beige, light blue): low dye concentration, easily affected by washing and friction to fade, and the color fastness to washing is mostly 2-3 levels;
Special colors (fluorescent color, metallic color): Fluorescent dyes contain photosensitive groups, which are prone to aging and discoloration under long-term light exposure; Metallic colors require the addition of metal powder, which is prone to detachment during friction and has high costs and complex processes.
In addition, fluctuations in dye batches, water hardness, dyeing temperature, etc. may cause slight color differences in yarns of the same color number but different batches (industry usually allows a deviation of △ E ≤ 2).
2. Constraints on yarn morphology and blending
Blended ratio: When acrylic fiber is blended with cotton, wool and other fibers, the dyeing properties of different fibers vary greatly. For example, acrylic cotton blend (acrylic accounts for 30%) requires reactive dyes for cotton and cationic dyes for acrylic. The two-color dyeing process is complex, and if the proportion is imbalanced, color unevenness may occur;
Yarn specification: Fine count yarn (above 40S) has a large surface area, uniform color absorption but is prone to fading; Coarse count yarn (less than 10S) has a deep color absorption but may have local color differences; High twist yarns, due to their tight structure and slow dye penetration, are prone to inconsistencies between the surface and the inside.
3. Production process and equipment limitations
Minimum order quantity threshold: Large vat dyeing (over 50kg) has low cost but high minimum order quantity; Small vat dyeing (5-10kg) is suitable for small batch customization, but the cost is 2-3 times that of large vat, and most manufacturers only accept customized orders of 20kg or more;
Process capability: Special effects such as gradient and tie dyeing require segmented dyeing or manual processing, with a low yield rate (about 70%), which can only be achieved by a few professional manufacturers; High temperature and high pressure dyeing (suitable for deep and dark colors) requires specialized equipment. If the manufacturer does not have this configuration, it is impossible to produce some dark colors;
Equipment compatibility: Some old devices cannot accurately control temperature and pH values, which can easily lead to color deviation.
4. Environmental Protection and Regulatory Constraints
Export orders must comply with EU REACH, OEKO-TEX 100 and other standards, and the use of azo dyes and heavy metal dyes (lead, cadmium) is prohibited, resulting in some retro colors (such as certain acid red) being unable to be produced due to dye restrictions; Domestic environmental policies require wastewater COD to meet standards, and highly polluting sulfur dyes are being phased out, further narrowing the range of available dyes.
5. Cost and efficiency issues
Customized colors require an additional sampling fee (200-500 yuan/time), and if the color sample is adjusted multiple times, the cost will accumulate; The production cycle is 3-7 days longer than the current goods (including sampling, confirmation, and mass production), which cannot meet the urgent order requirements.
3、 Practical suggestions for customizing colors
To reduce the impact of limitations, customers can take the following measures:
Clear requirements: inform in advance the purpose of the yarn (clothing/home textiles), color fastness requirements (such as clothing requiring washing resistance ≥ 3 levels);
Provide precise reference: prioritize using Pantone color cards over screen colors to avoid deviation caused by fading of the actual sample;
Negotiated minimum order quantity: For small batches (<20kg), digital printing can be chosen as an alternative to dyeing (but the effect is different from dyeing);
Sign the contract: specify the tolerance for color difference (△ E ≤ 2) and color fastness standards to avoid disputes in the future.
Conclusion
Customized color of acrylic yarn has a certain degree of freedom, but it needs to be planned reasonably within the limitations of color fastness, process, cost, etc. By fully communicating with the manufacturer and clarifying the details of the requirements, ideal color effects can be achieved to a large extent, meeting personalized production needs.
