Jacquard loom

weaving
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Also known as: Jacquard attachment, Jacquard mechanism
Also called:
Jacquard attachment or Jacquard mechanism
Key People:
Joseph-Marie Jacquard
Related Topics:
loom

Jacquard loom, in weaving, device incorporated in special looms to control individual warp yarns. It enabled looms to produce fabrics having intricate woven patterns such as tapestry, brocade, and damask, and it has also been adapted to the production of patterned knitted fabrics.

The Jacquard system was developed in 1804–05 by Joseph-Marie Jacquard of France, and it soon spread elsewhere. His system improved on the punched-card technology of Jacques de Vaucanson’s loom (1745). Jacquard’s loom used interchangeable punched cards that controlled the weaving of the cloth so that any desired pattern could be obtained automatically. These punched cards were adopted by the English inventor Charles Babbage as an input-output medium for his proposed Analytical Engine (which would have been the first digital computer) and were used by the American statistician Herman Hollerith to feed data to his census machine. They were also used as a means of inputting data into digital computers into the mid-20th century but were eventually replaced by electronic devices .

This article was most recently revised and updated by Erik Gregersen.