Kehuna clothing Rabbinic Judaism maintains that
shatnez was permitted in the case of the
avnet (
kohen's girdle), in which fine white linen was interwoven with purple, blue, and scarlet material. According to the rabbis, the purple, blue, and scarlet were made from wool and interwoven with the fine linen.
Karaite Judaism maintains that the purple, blue, and scarlet materials must also have been made of linen, since the Torah prohibits wearing garments made from combinations of wool and linen. The Torah does not state from what materials the purple, blue, and scarlet threads were made. The phrase regarding the kohenim
sons of Zadok, "they shall not gird themselves with any thing that causeth sweat" is interpreted in the Talmud to mean "they shall not gird themselves around the bent of the body, where sweat effuses most".
Judah ha-Nasi was of the opinion that the girdle of the ordinary priest was of shatnez, but
Eleazar ben Shammua says it was of fine linen. The Talmud states that the high priest wore a linen girdle on
Yom Kippur and a girdle of
shatnez on all other days.
Everyday tzitzit Torah law forbids ''kil'ayim
(shatnez
) - "intertying" wool and linen together, with the two exceptions being garments of kohanim and tzitit
. Concerning tzitzit,
chazal permit using wool and linen strings in tandem only when genuine tekhelet'' is available, whereas
kabbalist sources take it a step further by encouraging its practice.
Contact with shatnez The Talmud argues that a woolen garment may be worn over a linen garment, or vice versa, but they may not be knotted or sewed together.
Shatnez is prohibited only when worn as an ordinary garment, for the protection or benefit of the body, or for its warmth, but not if carried on the back as a burden or as merchandise. Felt soles with heels are also permitted, Cushions, pillows, and tapestry with which the bare body does not touch do not come under the prohibition, and lying on
shatnez is technically permitted. However, classical rabbinical commentators feared that some part of a
shatnez fabric might fold over and touch part of the body; hence, they went to the extreme of declaring that even if only the lowest of 10 couch-covers is of
shatnez, one may not lie on them. ==Observance and enforcement of the
shatnez law==