Product type | Material |
---|---|
Produced by | Alcantara S.p.A. |
Country | Japan Italy |
Introduced | 1970s |
Related brands | Ultrasuede |
Website | www |
Material | 69% polyester and 31% polyurethane |
---|---|
Production process | spinning process, chemical |
Introduced | 1970s |
Manufacturer | Alcantara S.p.A. |
Alcantara is the brand name of a synthetic textile with a soft, suede-like microfibre pile, noted for its durability. Alcantara was developed in the 1970s by Miyoshi Okamoto and initially manufactured by the Italian company Alcantara. The term has an Arabic root (Arabic: القنطرة, romanized: al-qantara) and means "the bridge".
Alcantara is produced by combining an advanced spinning process (producing very low denier bicomponent "islands-in-the-sea" fiber) and chemical and textile production processes (needle punching, buffing, impregnation, extraction, finishing, dyeing, etc.) which interact with each other.
Alcantara is commonly seen in automotive applications,[1] as a substitute for leather and vinyl in vehicle interior trim. It is also used in the design, fashion, consumer electronics and marine industries.[2]