Production Alpacas are shorn once a year in spring. After shearing, the fleece is roughly cleaned and sorted according to color. The dried wool is then carded; in this process, the loose alpaca fibers are aligned into a strain of Alpaca fleece with a carding machine's help. Like sheep, alpacas have thicker awn hairs. These long straight hairs located between the undercoat ensure that the fine coat does not become matted. Therefore alpacas should not be brushed; this would destroy their undercoat structure. The awn hairs are much coarser than the fine undercoat, and can be carded easily, but they can also be sorted out. After carding, the strains are ready to be spun into yarn with a spinning wheel. Finally, the wool should be washed to remove impurities. Alpaca wool contains almost no wool grease (lanolin), making it easy to clean. The wool is then ready for sale as knitting wool or for further processing.
Industry history The
Amerindians of Peru used this fiber in the manufacture of many styles of fabrics for thousands of years before its introduction into Europe as a commercial product. The alpaca was a crucial component of ancient life in the Andes, as it provided not only warm clothing, but also meat.
Incan culture involved the alpaca, as well as
llamas and
guanacos, in ritual sacrifice. Slaughter methods varied by the god receiving the sacrifice, the festival during which it took place, and even the color of the animal's fur. One method involved slitting open the animal's left side and reaching inside the chest cavity to remove the heart. The first European importations of alpaca fiber were into
Spain. Spain transferred that fiber to
Germany and
France. Apparently, alpaca yarn was spun in
England for the first time about 1808, but the fiber was condemned as an unworkable. In 1830, Benjamin Outram, of
Greetland, near Halifax, appears to have reattempted spinning it, and again it was condemned. These two attempts failed because of the style of fabric into which the yarn was woven—a type of
camlet. With the introduction of cotton
warps into
Bradford trade about 1836, the true qualities of alpaca could be assessed as it was developed into fabric. It is not known where the cotton warp and
mohair or alpaca
weft plain-cloth came from, but it was this structure which enabled
Titus Salt, then a young Bradford manufacturer, to use alpaca successfully. The typical "alpaca fabric" is a very characteristic "dress fabric." alpacas near an Inca burial site in
Peru The successful manufacture of various alpaca cloths by Salt and other Bradford manufacturers created a great demand for alpaca wool, which could not be met by the native product. Apparently, the number of alpacas available never increased appreciably. Unsuccessful attempts were made to acclimatize alpaca in England, on the European continent, and in Australia, and even to cross English breeds of
sheep with alpaca. There is a cross between alpaca and llama—a true
hybrid in every sense—producing a material placed upon the Liverpool market under the name "
Huarizo". Crosses between the alpaca and vicuña have not proved satisfactory, as the crosses that have produced offspring have a very short fleece, more characteristic of the vicuña, but attempts at better crosses are underway at farms in the US. Alpacas are now being bred in the US, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, UK, Germany and numerous other places. Alpaca ranching has a reasonably low impact on the environment. Individual U.S. farms are producing finished alpaca products like hats, mitts, scarves, socks, insoles, footwarmers, sweaters, and jackets. Alpaca fiber's light weight and warmth offers comfort in cold weather. Using a blend of alpaca and sheep's wool such as
merino is common to the alpaca fiber industry to reduce price, but no additional textile need be added to alpaca to improve processing or the qualities of the final, durable product. In December 2006, the General Assembly of the United Nations proclaimed 2009 to be the
International Year of Natural Fibres. ==Structure==