The name for this material...

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Mehrgan

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Hi all,
This is the question I'd once asked, but have come up against! :-( What is a jelly bag, or a muslin bag made of? What is the adjctive used to describe the thin material with lots of microscopic holes?!

Thank you in advance!
 
Hi all,
This is the question I'd once asked, but have come up against! :-( What is a jelly bag, or a muslin bag made of? What is the adjctive used to describe the thin material with lots of microscopic holes?!

Thank you in advance!

Not a teacher only a native.

Muslin is a type of cotton, 'typically an unbleached or white cloth, produced from carded cotton yarn', according to wikipeida.

Jelly bags (jam straining bags in BrE I am assuming), are commonly made of nylon, though other materials, such as cotton, are sometimes used.

I am unsure of a word descibing, 'a thin material with lots of microscopic holes.' Perhaps 'microporous' would fit?
 
In AmE the type of fabric you're describing would be generically referred to as "cheesecloth".
 
If it was the material for a bag, I'd call it muslin. If it was clothing, I would say cheesecloth.

And no, I've no idea why!
 
Would you use the word "gauze" if it was clothing?

Thanks.
 
Would you use the word "gauze" if it was clothing?

Thanks.

I don't think so, no. Gauze is the open-weave material that you put over cotton wool and salve on a wound (an injury) before putting a plaster (Band-aid) over the top to hold it in place.

A loose stretchy bandage is made of "crepe".
 
If it was the material for a bag, I'd call it muslin. If it was clothing, I would say cheesecloth.

And no, I've no idea why!

I would too. I guess that the way were heard it used. ;-)
 
Many thanks to all dear posters!
Can I use 'sheer' as an adjective to describe such stuff?


And, any nontechnical name for the material used in screen doors?



Best!
 
And, any nontechnical name for the material used in screen doors?

"wire mesh"
 
Can I use 'sheer' as an adjective to describe such stuff?
It depends. The main point about 'sheer' is that you are drawing attention to the near-transparency of the material, not what its made of or for.
 
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