Understanding Silk Fabrics: Organza, Chiffon, Crepe, Georgette, Crepe de Chine and Momme Weight
Silk fabrics are admired for their beauty, softness, sheen, drape, and elegance. However, not all silk fabrics behave in the same way. Some are crisp and transparent, some are soft and flowing, some have a pebbled surface, while others are sheer but comparatively stronger.
This article explains some important silk fabrics such as organza silk, chiffon silk, crepe fabric, crepe silk, crepe de Chine, georgette silk, and Kashmere silk. It also explains the meaning of momme weight, which is commonly used to describe the weight of silk fabrics.
Many silk fabrics differ not only because of the fibre used, but also because of yarn twist, weave structure, fabric weight, and finishing. For example, chiffon, georgette, and crepe may all be made from silk, but their appearance and handle are different because of the twist and arrangement of yarns.
1. Organza Silk
Silk organza is a sheer, thin, open-weave fabric. It is heavier and crisper than silk gauze. It has a smooth, flat finish and is known for its stiffness, transparency, and structural quality.
The crispness of organza comes mainly from the use of tightly twisted yarns. Organza is usually made in a plain weave. The yarns may have around 10 to 20 turns per inch, giving the fabric its firm and wiry handle.
Organza is similar to cotton organdy in appearance, but organza is made with silk and is transparent. Because of its crisp drape, it is often used where volume, stiffness, or a transparent layer is required.
Common Uses of Organza Silk
Organza is used for veils, undergowns, bridal wear, evening dresses, overlays, decorative panels, and as a base fabric for embellishment. In Indian textiles and fashion, organza is also seen in sarees, dupattas, embroidered panels, and festive garments where a crisp transparent appearance is desired.
Organza requires careful sewing. Since it is transparent, seams, facings, hems, and stitching lines may be visible from the outside. This is why finishing techniques become very important when stitching organza garments or saree blouses.
2. Chiffon Silk
The word chiffon literally means “rag” in French, but in textile usage it refers to an elegant, sheer, lightweight fabric with a soft and graceful drape.
Chiffon has a soft, supple, thin hand and a slightly crepe-like texture. It is generally made using a loose plain weave and tightly twisted single crepe yarns in both warp and weft.
Chiffon may be made from silk, cotton, nylon, polyester, rayon, or other fibres. However, silk chiffon is especially valued for its delicate appearance, lightness, and fluid fall.
Texture and Appearance of Chiffon
Chiffon is very light and diaphanous. It is sheer, delicate in appearance, and slightly rough to the touch because of the crepe yarns. Although it looks delicate, it can be a relatively strong and balanced fabric when properly woven.
The characteristic fine wrinkles in chiffon are created by the highly twisted yarns. In chiffon, the weft yarn may be either S twist or Z twist. This twist gives the fabric its soft crepe-like surface.
Common Uses of Chiffon
Chiffon is used for dresses, blouses, dupattas, scarves, millinery, lampshades, bridal gowns, evening wear, formal wear, nightgowns, and linings. In Indian garments, chiffon is very popular for sarees and dupattas because it falls softly around the body and gives a light, elegant appearance.
Chiffon is difficult to cut and sew because it is light, slippery, and delicate. It may shift while cutting and may fray during stitching. Gentle handling and careful finishing are necessary.
3. Crepe Fabric
Crepe is a fabric characterized by a crinkled, puckered, pebbly, or rough surface. This surface effect is usually produced by using highly twisted yarns, especially in the weft, and sometimes in the warp or in both directions.
Crepe is usually made with a plain weave, although crepe effects can also be produced in other structures. The fabric may be soft and pliable, and its surface may range from fine and flat to rough, pebbled, mossy, or even bark-like.
Crepe fabrics can be made from natural fibres such as silk, cotton, and wool, as well as man-made fibres such as rayon, polyester, and nylon.
Why Does Crepe Have a Crinkled Surface?
The crinkled texture of crepe is mainly due to the use of high-twist yarns. When these yarns are woven and later finished, the twist tends to contract and create an irregular surface. This gives crepe its characteristic grainy or pebbled appearance.
Crepe is not one single fabric. It is a family of fabrics with a creped or crinkled surface. Crepe may be made from silk, polyester, rayon, cotton, or other fibres. Therefore, the word “crepe” describes the surface character more than the fibre itself.
4. Crepe Silk
Silk crepe is a luxurious silk fabric with a good sheen and a pebbly texture. This texture is obtained by using high-twist yarns.
Silk crepe has a beautiful drape and is widely used for dresses, slacks, skirts, lightweight suits, bridal gowns, and evening wear. It combines elegance with movement, making it useful for garments that need both fall and refinement.
In sarees, crepe silk gives a fluid drape and a slightly textured surface. It is often preferred where a graceful fall and subtle surface interest are desired.
5. Crepe de Chine
Crepe de Chine, pronounced “krape dee sheen,” is a French term meaning “crepe from China.” It is similar to silk crepe, but it is usually lighter in weight and less heavily textured.
Crepe de Chine is made with highly twisted S and Z filament yarns alternating in the weft, along with a normally twisted filament warp. This construction gives it a matte surface and a fine pebbled texture.
The surface of crepe de Chine reflects tiny points of light, giving the fabric visual depth and a refined appearance. It is known for its pleasing drape, durability, and good wrinkle resistance.
Common Uses of Crepe de Chine
Designers use crepe de Chine for elegant slacks, skirts, dresses, suits, blouses, scarves, and evening wear. It is lighter and smoother than many heavier crepes, making it suitable for garments where softness and elegance are important.
6. Crepe and Georgette Yarn
Crepe and georgette effects depend strongly on yarn twist. A crepe or georgette yarn is usually a highly twisted yarn, often with around 2000 to 3600 twists per meter. It may be made of two threads of raw silk.
A crepe yarn may generally have around 1200 to 4000 twists per meter. Such highly twisted yarns are used to produce crepe effects in woven or knitted fabrics.
Twist direction is often described as S twist or Z twist. The controlled use of S and Z twist yarns helps create balance, texture, and the characteristic crepe or georgette surface.
7. Georgette Silk
Silk georgette is a fine, lightweight, plain-weave crepe fabric. It usually contains two highly twisted S yarns and two highly twisted Z yarns arranged alternately in both warp and weft.
Georgette is made from crepe yarn and has a grainy texture, sheer appearance, and a thin, dry hand. It is heavier than chiffon and is similar to silk crepe, but it is usually not as soft or lustrous as crepe.
Georgette is durable, but it can snag easily. It drapes very fluidly and falls into soft ripples, making it suitable for garments that need movement and flow.
Common Uses of Georgette Silk
Silk georgette is used for blouses, bias-cut flared skirts, dresses, evening wear, scarves, and sarees. It is also useful where a fabric must be sheer but slightly stronger and heavier than chiffon.
Georgette does not show pin marks easily and does not hold a sharp crease. However, it is relatively difficult to sew because of its light, creped, and fluid nature.
8. Kashmere Silk
Kashmere silk is a silk fabric made with a 2/1 right-hand twill weave. This weave structure gives the fabric a soft finish.
The twill weave creates a subtle diagonal effect and a smoother surface than plain weave fabrics. Such fabrics may be valued for softness, drape, and comfort.
Needs source verification: The term “Kashmere silk” may be used differently in different trade contexts. It is useful to verify whether the term refers strictly to a particular weave, a trade name, or a regional naming practice.
9. Momme Weight in Silk
Momme, often written as mm, is a traditional unit used to describe the weight of silk fabric. One momme is approximately equal to 3.62 grams per square yard or about 4.33 grams per square meter.
In simple terms, a higher momme value means a heavier silk fabric, while a lower momme value means a lighter silk fabric.
Approximate Momme Weight of Common Silk Fabrics
| Silk Fabric | Approximate Momme Weight | General Character |
|---|---|---|
| Organza | 4 to 6 mm | Very light, crisp, sheer, stiff |
| Chiffon | 6 to 8 mm | Light, sheer, soft, flowing |
| Georgette | 8 to 12 mm | Sheer, grainy, heavier than chiffon |
| Crepe de Chine | 12 to 18 mm | Smooth, fine crepe texture, elegant drape |
In increasing order of weight, these fabrics may be broadly arranged as:
Organza < Chiffon < Georgette < Crepe de Chine < Crepe
Momme weight is especially useful when comparing silk fabrics for sarees, scarves, bridal wear, linings, and luxury garments. A lighter momme gives transparency and delicacy, while a heavier momme gives better body, durability, and fall.
10. Comparison of Organza, Chiffon, Georgette and Crepe de Chine
| Fabric | Transparency | Handle | Drape | Surface Texture | Typical Uses |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Organza | Very sheer | Crisp and stiff | Structured | Smooth and flat | Veils, overlays, undergowns, embellished sarees, bridal wear |
| Chiffon | Very sheer | Soft and delicate | Flowing and limp | Slightly crepe-like | Sarees, dupattas, scarves, blouses, evening dresses |
| Georgette | Sheer | Dry and grainy | Fluid with soft ripples | Grainy crepe surface | Sarees, blouses, dresses, scarves, flared skirts |
| Crepe de Chine | Less sheer than chiffon | Smooth and refined | Soft and graceful | Fine pebbled texture | Dresses, suits, scarves, blouses, evening wear |
11. Common Confusion: Chiffon vs Georgette
Chiffon and georgette are often confused because both are sheer, lightweight fabrics with a crepe-like effect. However, they are not the same.
| Point of Difference | Chiffon | Georgette |
|---|---|---|
| Weight | Lighter | Heavier than chiffon |
| Feel | Softer and thinner | Drier and grainier |
| Drape | Limp and flowing | Fluid but with more body |
| Texture | Fine crepe-like texture | More pronounced grainy texture |
| Sewing | Difficult due to slippery lightness | Difficult, but generally more stable than chiffon |
12. Relevance in Indian Textiles and Sarees
In Indian fashion and sarees, these fabrics are widely used because each fabric gives a different visual and draping effect.
A chiffon saree gives a soft, floating, graceful fall. A georgette saree gives a slightly heavier and more textured fall. An organza saree gives a crisp, transparent, and structured look. Crepe silk and crepe de Chine give a more refined, elegant drape with a subtle surface texture.
For merchandisers and buyers, understanding these differences is important because the fabric name alone does not explain the full product. Weight, twist, finish, transparency, embellishment, and end use must also be considered.
13. Frequently Asked Questions
Q1. Is organza softer than chiffon?
No. Organza is usually crisper and stiffer, while chiffon is softer, lighter, and more flowing.
Q2. Which is heavier: chiffon or georgette?
Georgette is generally heavier than chiffon. It also has a more grainy texture and slightly more body.
Q3. What gives crepe fabric its texture?
The crepe texture is mainly produced by highly twisted yarns. These yarns create a crinkled, pebbled, or puckered effect after weaving and finishing.
Q4. What is momme weight?
Momme is a traditional unit used to describe the weight of silk fabric. A higher momme value generally means a heavier silk fabric.
Q5. Which silk fabric is best for sarees?
There is no single best fabric. Chiffon is good for a light, flowing drape. Georgette gives more body. Organza gives a crisp and structured look. Crepe silk gives a graceful and elegant fall.
Conclusion
Organza, chiffon, georgette, crepe, and crepe de Chine are all important silk fabrics, but each has a distinct identity. Their differences come from weave, yarn twist, weight, texture, transparency, and finishing.
For students, designers, merchandisers, and textile professionals, these distinctions are important. A fabric is not understood only by its name, but by how it is made, how it feels, how it drapes, how it behaves during stitching, and how it performs in the final garment or saree.
Understanding these fabrics helps in better fabric selection, product development, garment construction, saree merchandising, and textile appreciation.
Goyal, P. Difference among Chiffon, Crepe, Crepe-de-Chine, Georgette, Organza,. My Textile Notes. Available at: https://mytextilenotes.blogspot.com/2010/08/difference-among-chiffon-crepe-crepe-de.html?m=0
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