Eisengarn

A Marcel Breuer chair, with Grete Reichardt's 'eisengarn' fabric, 1927.

Eisengarn, meaning "iron yarn" in English, is a light-reflecting, strong, waxed-cotton thread. It was invented and manufactured in Germany in the mid-19th century, but is now best known for its use in cloth woven for the tubular-steel chairs designed by Marcel Breuer while he was a teacher at the Bauhaus design school.

The yarn is also known as Glanzgarn ('gloss' or 'glazed' yarn). [1]

  1. ^ zeitlos-berlin.de, Eisengarn – Eine Material Geschichte. Retrieved 27 November 2016