Fabrics C.S.
Prices are per yard.
JEANS (Wool/Cotton)
#2,#3, #3X, #4, #9, #12, #13B, #FG, #FGX    
72% Wool, 28% Cotton, 58” wide
$27.00
#L2, Logwood dyed - 72% Wool, 28% Cotton, 58” wide. This fabric will fade with repeated exposure to sunlight. UNAVAILABLE
CASSIMERE (Wool/Cotton)
#C3 - Cassimere, 72% Wool, 28% Cotton, 58" wide UNAVAILABLE
 #C4,  #CFG - Cassimere, 72% Wool, 28% Cotton, 58" wide
$27.00
#C3BL, #C8BL - Cassimere, 72% Wool, 28% Cotton, 58" wide
$27.00
LINSEY (Wool/Cotton)
#D3X - 54% Wool, 46% Cotton, 58" wide
$24.00
#D5, #D8BL - 63%Wool, 37% Cotton, 58" wide
$24.00
KERSEY (Wool)
#K1 - 100% Wool, 58" wide. This is the fabric widely used for mid-late war Richmond and Charleston Depot garments. It also appears in imported Tait  jackets, a couple of double breasted frock coats and at least one surviving great coat.
$36.00
#K2CS - 100% Wool, 58" wide.
$36.00
#K6 - 100% Wool, 58" wide.
$36.00
#KBlack - 100% Wool, 58" wide.
$36.00
SATINET (Wool/Cotton)
#SFG - 63% Wool, 37% Cotton, 58” wide
SOLD OUT
SHIRTING (Cotton)
Plain - 100% Cotton, 58” wide     
$15.00
Mrs. Nelson's Fancy - 100% Cotton, 58” wide. This goods is a copy of the lining in a Confederate roundabout. UNAVAILABLE  
Out of Stock
Cooper Check - 100% Cotton, 58” wide. This goods is a copy of the lining in a Confederate single-breasted frock coat.
$21.00
Delia's Draft - 100% Cotton, 58' wide. This goods is a copy of home made goods from middle Tennessee. UNAVAILABLE
Out of Stock
Stripes - 100% Cotton, 58” wide                                        
The brown & white and the brown, white & blue stripes are all copied from a single Confederate shirt. All stripes run across the goods.

$21.00
OTHER COTTONS
Osnaburg - 100% Cotton, 50” wide
$  6.00
Drill - 100% Cotton, 36” wide     
$  6.00
Duck - 100% Cotton, 58” wide
$  6.00
Brown Polished Cotton - 100% Cotton, 46” wide
$  9.00
Ivory Polished Cotton - 100% Cotton, 46" wide
$  9.00
Black Polished Cotton - 100% Cotton, 46" wide
$  9.00
      Way back in June 1982 I wove my first piece of woolen jeans, it was light brown. The second piece was heavy cotton jeans. Both pieces were less than a yard long. These test pieces were followed by the first piece of what came to be called #1. A search of the County Cloth archives failed to locate any documentation explaining the use of our current # system. The #'s first appear on work tickets in October 1983. Bored yet? Okay, though the reason is now lost to history, I chose to refer to the fabrics by # instead of name, hence the first woolen jeans offered was #1 (it was medium dark, slightly bluish, grey; see the problem?). As I added other colors they were simply assigned the next number. At one time we actually went as high #26. When we took delivery of our first Confederate kersey in 1986 I added a "K" (as in kersey) to the # system and started with #K1. On occasion, I put a colored cotton warp on the loom. This created new colors even when using our regular jeans yarns. The solution was the addition of "B" for brown and "BL" for blue to the end of the #, thus #3B or #13BL. When I started offering satinet I added "S" to the # followed by the jeans designation because we usually used the same yarns for both satinet and jeans. So if you bought #3 jeans, #S3 satinet or #3B jeans they all contained the same color wool but differed somewhat in appearance as a result of construction differences. That brings us to the logwood dyed fabrics. We just added "L" to both the jeans and satinet #'s to identify and differentiate them. This all makes sense if you have the swatches before you but cannot quite describe the color you see. Had enough? I have...