Plate No. 020weave
Cream
Indigo
Ochre
- First documented
- 1800s
- Origin
- Western Europe, United Kingdom
- Fiber
- cotton
- Weave
- 5-end sateen (weft-faced)
- Family
- weaves
Plate No. 020 · weave
Sateen
Sateen is the satin structure turned weft-side out: the long floats run crosswise in the weft rather than lengthwise in the warp, and the cloth is typically cotton rather than silk. The floats give cotton a soft hand and a gentle luster it cannot get from a plain weave, which is why sateen dominates bedsheets. The trade-off is the same as satin's: exposed floats snag and abrade more easily than a bound surface.
Named for
An English alteration of satin, coined for the cotton version of the weave.