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The Survival of Handloom Weaving in Rural Canada Circa 1870

Kris Inwood and Phyllis Wagg

The Journal of Economic History, 1993, vol. 53, issue 2, 346-358

Abstract: Handloom weaving with a mixture of wool and cotton yarn was common in late nineteenth-century Canada. The hand technology survived using industrial inputs and part-time female labor whose opportunity cost was relatively low in rural areas. The demand for homespun was income-sensitive and reinforced by the cold Canadian climate. The patterns of weaving by men and women differed, but both produced for the market in addition to home consumption. Cloth constituted a significant share of farm production, especially in low-income areas.

Date: 1993
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