Skein dyeing and color matching at Althouse Customer Service Laboratory
- 1952
View of dyeing technicians working in the Customer Service and Quality Control Laboratory at the Althouse Chemical Company plant in Reading, Pennsylvania. The technicians are engaged in a skein dyeing process whereby lengths of yarn are dipped into a receptacle containing dye pigment. In the Althouse laboratory, this process was typically used either to test quality control of plant production lots or treat final research and development samples. Several dress forms typically used to give shape to nylon stockings are also visible near the windows.
Based in Reading, Pennsylvania, the Althouse Chemical Company was founded in 1915 by C. Scott Althouse (1880-1970) as a small, family-owned firm specializing in fabric dyes of a superior quality and class. In 1954, the Crompton & Knowles Corporation of Worcester, Massachusetts acquired Althouse, which continued to operate as a division of Crompton & Knowles and a leader in the specialty dyes industry.
Property | Value |
---|---|
Contributor | |
Format | |
Genre | |
Extent |
|
Inscription |
|
Subject | |
Rights | In Copyright - Rights-holder(s) Unlocatable or Unidentifiable |
Credit line |
|
Institutional location
Department | |
---|---|
Collection | |
Physical container |
|
View collection guide View in library catalog
Learn More
Related Items
Cite as
“Skein Dyeing and Color Matching at Althouse Customer Service Laboratory,” 1952. Photographs from the Records of the Althouse, Bates, and Crompton Chemical Companies, Box 1. Science History Institute. Philadelphia. https://digital.sciencehistory.org/works/3f462544p.
This citation is automatically generated and may contain errors.