FINISHING & SPECIAL PROCESSES

Heat Setting for Synthetic Scarves

Temperature, dwell time, and tension parameters for polyester and nylon scarf fabrics — with dimensional stability data and factory QC protocols.

180–210°C Polyester Setting Range
20–60 s Typical Dwell Time
≤ 1.5% Residual Shrinkage After Setting
Permanent Dimensional Stability (Below Setting Temp)

What Is Heat Setting?

Heat setting is a thermofixation process that stabilises the molecular structure of synthetic fibers by exposing fabric to controlled high temperature while holding dimensions under tension. When a thermoplastic fiber such as polyester or nylon is heated above its glass-transition temperature (Tg) and then cooled while restrained, the polymer chains re-align in that constrained state — permanently locking in the fabric’s dimensions and surface geometry.

For scarf manufacturers, heat setting serves three functions: it controls shrinkage to <1.5% in subsequent wet processing and consumer washing; it eliminates creases and stabilises edge curl in knitted structures; and in some cases it modifies surface texture or lustre. Without heat setting, polyester scarves can shrink 8–12% in the first machine wash.

GLASS-TRANSITION REFERENCE Polyester (PET) Tg ≈ 80°C; heat setting above 180°C allows full polymer chain mobility and re-crystallisation. Nylon 6 Tg ≈ 50°C; setting at 160–180°C achieves comparable stabilisation at lower temperature.

Temperature Zone Reference

Stenter oven set-point by application. Actual fabric temperature lags oven temperature by 10–20°C depending on fabric weight and line speed.

PRE-RELAX 130–160°C Partial stress relief only; not full setting
NYLON SETTING 160–180°C Nylon 6 & 6,6 standard range
POLYESTER STANDARD 185–200°C Most polyester scarves; optimal balance
HIGH-CRYSTALLINITY 200–210°C Dense weaves; longer dwell preferred
RISK ZONE > 215°C Yellowing, tensile loss, dye migration risk

Heat Setting Methods

METHOD HS-01

Stenter Frame Heat Setting (Continuous)

The primary industrial method. Fabric runs in open-width through a multi-zone oven mounted on a pin or clip stenter frame that holds width dimension precisely. Temperature, line speed, and overfeed percentage are independently controlled. All production-volume polyester and nylon scarves use this method for greige or post-dye setting.

185–200°C
Oven Set Point (Polyester)
20–40 s
Dwell Time
±0.5%
Width Control Precision
0–5%
Overfeed (Length Shrinkage Allow.)
METHOD HS-02

Batch Cabinet Heat Setting

Rolls or packages of fabric (or yarn) are loaded into a sealed chamber. Hot dry air or saturated steam circulates around the load. Slower penetration means longer processing time (30–90 min). Used for yarn packages prior to weaving, velvet pile setting, or small-batch production runs where stenter access is not cost-effective. Width control is approximate — not suitable for dimensional-critical cut-and-sew scarves.

170–190°C
Chamber Temperature
30–90 min
Processing Time
Yarn / Roll
Substrate Form
±2–3%
Dimensional Precision
METHOD HS-03

Slack Heat Setting

Fabric passes through the stenter with minimal or zero width tension — allowing controlled lateral and longitudinal shrinkage. The result is a softer, bulkier fabric with more pronounced texture. Used deliberately for chenille-effect polyester scarves, knit-structure enhancement, or when a relaxed hand feel is the target. Dimensional repeatability requires tight overfeed and width stop calibration.

175–195°C
Temperature
8–15%
Controlled Shrinkage
Low/Zero
Width Tension
Softer
Hand Feel Outcome

Dimensional Stability Data — Before vs After Setting

ISO 6330 Method 2A (40°C wash, 3 cycles). Factory-measured on production batches.

Fiber / Construction Shrinkage Unsettled Shrinkage After Setting Width Change Grade
100% Polyester plain weave−8.5%−0.8%−0.4%Pass
Polyester jacquard knit−11.2%−1.2%−0.6%Pass
Nylon 6,6 woven−5.8%−0.9%−0.3%Pass
Polyester / viscose blend (70/30)−9.0%−2.1%−1.2%Marginal
Polyester microfibre (75D)−10.5%−0.6%−0.2%Pass
Polyester velvet pile−13.0%−2.5%−0.8%Requires confirmation
Nylon / spandex (90/10)−6.5%−1.0%−0.5%Pass
Parameter Under-Set (<175°C) Optimal (185–200°C) Over-Set (>215°C)
Residual shrinkage3–8%< 1.5%< 0.5%
Tensile strength retained98–100%95–100%75–88%
Colour change (grey scale)4–54–52–3 (yellowing)
Hand feelStiff / limpOptimalBrittle / harsh
Dye migration riskLowLowHigh

Fiber Suitability for Heat Setting

CONDITIONAL

Polyester / Viscose

The synthetic fraction sets normally; viscose fraction adds residual shrinkage variability. 60°C wash testing recommended post-setting.

CONDITIONAL

Acrylic

Acrylic softens above 140°C and can be steam-set, but stenter heat setting risks permanent hand-feel degradation. Steam boarding preferred.

NOT APPLICABLE

Wool / Cotton / Silk

Natural protein and cellulosic fibers lack thermoplasticity. Heat setting does not apply. Dimensional stability achieved by other finishing routes.

Common Misconceptions

MYTH

“Higher temperature always gives better dimensional stability.”

FACT

Above ~210°C, polyester undergoes thermal degradation — tensile strength drops 10–25%, yellowing appears, and dye molecules migrate causing shade shift. Optimal setting is at the minimum temperature that achieves target residual shrinkage.

MYTH

“One heat setting run is enough regardless of subsequent processing.”

FACT

Post-dye wet processes at 130°C (high-temperature jet dyeing) can partially relax a greige-set fabric. A second setting after dyeing may be required to restore dimensional stability — common practice in quality polyester jacquard scarf production.

MYTH

“Heat set polyester scarves will never shrink in washing.”

FACT

Well heat-set polyester maintains <1.5% shrinkage at 40°C wash. However, washing above 60°C — higher than the recommended care label — can partially relax polymer chains and reintroduce shrinkage. Care label temperature must be calibrated to the setting temperature.

MYTH

“Batch cabinet setting gives the same results as stenter setting.”

FACT

Batch cabinet setting achieves thermal stabilisation but without controlled width tension — dimensional precision is ±2–3% vs ±0.5% on a stenter. For finished scarves requiring precise width, stenter frame setting is non-negotiable.

Buyer Specification Guidance

WHAT TO SPECIFY IN YOUR TECH PACK

  • Setting stage Pre-dye / Post-dye / Both
  • Setting temperature °C (oven set-point)
  • Residual shrinkage limit ≤ 1.5% (warp & weft)
  • Width tolerance ±1.5% of nominal
  • Test method ISO 6330 (40°C, 3 cycles)
  • Wash label max temp ≤ Setting temp − 30°C

FACTORY DOCUMENTS TO REQUEST

  • Stenter log Temp / speed / width per lot
  • Shrinkage test report ISO 6330 per colour
  • Tensile retention data Pre vs post setting
  • Colour fastness post-setting ISO 105-C06
  • Production batch record Date, operator, machine ID
SPANDEX CONTENT WARNING Fabrics containing >10% spandex/elastane require careful temperature calibration. Spandex decomposes above 190–195°C and can cause permanent loss of stretch recovery. Request elongation retention test data (before vs after setting) when spandex content exceeds 8%.

Frequently Asked Questions

What temperature is needed to heat set polyester scarves?
Polyester heat setting requires 180–210°C depending on yarn denier and fabric weight. Standard production uses 185–195°C with 25–45 second dwell time. Exceeding 215°C risks yellowing and tensile loss.
Does heat setting permanently fix scarf dimensions?
Heat setting produces near-permanent dimensional stability in synthetic scarves provided subsequent wet processes stay below the setting temperature. Washing above 60°C can partially relax the set. ISO 6330 wash testing after heat setting confirms retained stability.
Can heat setting improve the hand feel of polyester scarves?
Yes. Controlled heat setting under tension smooths fiber crimp and reduces surface roughness. Slack heat setting (without tension) produces a softer, bulkier hand by allowing controlled shrinkage. The two approaches are used for different product outcomes.
What is the difference between stenter frame and batch heat setting?
Stenter frame (continuous) heat setting processes fabric in open-width through a controlled-temperature oven with pin or clip frames to hold dimensions precisely. Batch (cabinet) heat setting processes rolled or folded fabric in a sealed chamber — slower, less precise, suited to yarn or small production runs.
Should heat setting happen before or after dyeing?
For polyester, pre-dye heat setting (greige setting) stabilises the fabric before high-temperature dyeing, preventing distortion in the jet dyeing machine. Post-dye setting is also practised to lock in final dimensions but requires lower temperature to avoid dye migration.

Related Technical Guides

See this process applied: Heat setting parameters and shrinkage test records are available as part of WeaveEssence factory technical documentation for polyester and nylon scarf programs. Contact the technical team for specification-specific data sheets.