CONTENT NOTE
DSIC LIST OF TOPICS TERM 1
                           2024/2025
       TEACHER’S NAME      AKINLOTAN ELIZABETH
       SUBJECT             HOME ECONOMICS
       CLASS               YEAR 9
       SCHOOL              DSIC
       DEPARTMENT          VOCATIONAL
       WK                           MAIN TOPICS
WEEK    1    Introduction to Textiles study.
        2    Introduction to Textiles study.
        3    Sewing Machine.
        4    Sewing Machine.
        5    Garment construction Process
        6    Basic Stiches in crossway strips
        7    MID TERM BREAK
        8    Arrangement of Fullness
        9    Dress Sense
        10   Dress Sense
        11   Practical/Project work
        12   Revision.
        13   Examination.
             WEEK ONE
CONTENT: Introduction to Textiles study
SUB-TOPIC: Meaning, Reasons and Uses of Textiles.
 LEARNING OBJECTIVES: At the end of the lesson, students
should be able to:
  i.     Explain the meaning of Textiles.
  ii.    State reasons for the study of Textiles.
  iii.   State the uses of Textiles
  iv.    Explain the basic term
                INTRODUCTION TO TEXTILES STUDY
   Textiles are fibres, cloths or materials used to make fabrics.
  The study of textiles involves an understanding of the origin
  of fibres to the ways of constructing fibres into fabrics,
  properties of the fabrics, ways of caring for the fabrics and
  the uses of the fabrics.
     REASONS FOR THE STUDY OF TEXTILES
  1. Identifying different types of fabrics and their
     characteristics or properties.
  2. Selecting or choosing the suitable fabric for a given
     purpose.
  3. Taking proper care of the fabric
  4. Handling the fabric correctly
  5. Making you a wise consumer.
                GENERAL USES OF TEXTILES
1. Textiles are used for construction of personal and family
   clothes e. g dresses, underwear
2. Construction of household linen, such as bed sheets,
   curtains, towels
3. Keeping the body warm or cool e.g sweaters and cotton
   wears
4. Protecting the body from rain or wind e.g rain coats
5. Beautifying or adorning the body
6. Covering our nakedness (modesty)
                BASIC TEXTILES TERM
1. Fibre is a hair-like basic unit of raw material used in the
   making of yarns and fabrics e.g. cotton, linen, silk, wool,
   nylon fibres.
2. Yarn is a thread made by twisting or spinning fibres.
3. Fabric is cloth constructed with yarn or directly from
   fibres by weaving, knitting, crocheting, felting, etc. A
   woven fabric is made up of two set of yarn or thread-the
   warp and the weft.
4. The warp is the yarn or thread which runs length-wise in
   a woven fabric. It is parallel to the selvedge.
5. The weft is the yarn that runs cross-wise in a fabric. It
   runs at right angles across the selvedge grain.
 6. The selvedge is the edge of the fabric made by the weft
    thread or yarn by turning over the warp thread. It is the
    mill-finish edge of a fabric which runs in a length-wise
    direction.
 7. Bias is the diagonal direction across the two grain lines,
    warp and weft.
               WEEK TWO
CONTENT: Introduction to Textiles Study
SUB-TOPIC: Classification, Properties and Manufacturing
Process of Fibres.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES: At the end of the lesson, students
should be able to:
  i. Classify fibres into natural and man-made
  ii. List the natural and man-made fibres.
  iii. Enumerate the properties of each fibre.
       CLASSIFICATION AND PROPERTIES OF FIBRES
Fibres are classified into two classes, they are:
  1. Natural Fibres
  2. Man- made
     1. NATURAL FIBRES- are gotten from either plant e. g
        cotton and linen or from animals e. g wool and silk.
     2. MAN-MADE FIBRES- are gotten from cellulose based
        fibres e. g viscose rayon and acetate or from non-
        cellulose based e. g nylon, polyester and acrylics.
                           Fibres
                              |
            ____________________________________
            |                                                |
           Natural fibres                             Man-made fibres
            |                                            |
_________________                           ______________
|                |                         |               |
Animal Fibre Plant Fibres           Cellulose-based Non-cellulose
e.g i. wool           e. g cotton        e. g rayon      e. g nylon
    ii. silk                linen            acetate        polyester
                   PROPERTIES OF FIBRES
  • A. COTTON: Cotton is a vegetable/plant fibre. It is made
    from cotton balls of the cotton plant. The cotton fibres
    surround the seeds of the cotton plant.
  • PROPERTIES OF COTTON
  1. It absorbs moisture quickly
  2. It is reasonably strong and durable
  3. It washes well
  4. It can be dyed easily
  5. It is cool and comfortable to wear
B. LINEN: Is a vegetable/plant fibre. It is gotten from the
stem of flax plant. The flax plant grows in countries such as
France, Russia, it is not produced in Nigeria.
PROPERTIES
1. It is stronger than cotton
2. It is absorbent and cool to wear
3. It dries slowly
4. It washes well
5. It is a good conductor of heat.
 C. WOOL: is an animal fibre. It is gotten from the hair of
fleece of sheep. The hair of camel, Angora, rabbit or Angora
goat can also be used. It is commonly produced in Britain,
Australia etc.
  PROPERTIES
1. A wool fibre has a scaly appearance
2. It is stronger when dry than when wet.
3. It gives the smell of burning feather when burnt.
4. It makes a very absorbent fabrics
5. It is readily affected by bleach
D. SILK- is an animal fibre. It is produced by silkworm. Silk is
produced chiefly in France, Italy , China and Japan.
PROPERTIES
1. It is a very strong fibre.
2. It is smooth and fine.
3. It is warm to touch.
4. It absorbs moisture easily.
5. It is an expensive fibre.
E. VISCOSE RAYON; is made by treating wood pulp or cotton
   linters with certain chemicals.
 PROPERTIES
1. It is not very strong especially when wet
2. It has smooth surface.
3. It resembles silk in appearance only.
F. ACETATE; it is made from wood pulp or cotton linters
   treated with acetic acid and acetic anhydride.
PROPERTIES
1. It dries quickly.
2. It loses strength when wet.
3. It is moderately elastic.
G.NYLON: is the family name for all synthetic polyamides.
PROPERTIES
1. It is very strong
2. It is light in weight
3. It requires no ironing
4. It is durable
             ASSIGNMENT
1. Outline the manufacturing process of the following:
I. Silk
II. Nylon
III. Cotton
IV. Acetate
3. Research images of the following fabrics and paste in
    your note;
I. Cotton
II. Silk
III. Wool
IV. Acetate
V. Nylon
VI. Viscose rayon
              WEEK THREE
CONTENT: Experiment and test on different fibres
SUB-TOPIC: Appearance, microscopic and burning test
LEARNING OBJECTIVES: At the end of the lesson, students
should be able to:
i.
                     WEEK FOUR
  CONTENT: Care and Handling of different fabrics
  SUB-TOPIC: Reasons, Laundry agents and equipment.
  LEARNING OBJECTIVES: At the end of the lesson, students
  should be able to:
  i. State reasons for caring for clothing.
  ii. Explain the factors to consider in laundering fabrics.
  iii. Enumerate the laundry agents and equipment.
   CARE AND HANDLING OF DIFFERENT FABRICS.
       REASONS FOR CARE OF CLOTHING
1. To make the clothing last longer. Dirt can damage fabrics
2. To kill any disease-carrying germs and pests in the fabrics
3. To keep the clothes looking clean or better, dirty clothes
   are unpleasant to look at
4. To save money since clean clothes last longer
5. To ensure that whatever clothes you have will be
   available for wearing anytime.
     LAUNDRY AGENTS AND EQUIPMENT
• Laundry agents are substances which aid the removal of
   dirt from articles.
1. Water: used for soaking, washing and rinsing clothes.
2. Soaps and detergents: to lower the surface tension of
   water, remove certain stains, kill carrying germs in
   fabrics.
3. Bleaches: make white cotton and linen fabrics whiter,
   remove certain stains, kill disease carrying germs in
   fabric.
4. Stiffening agents; to stiffen cotton and linen fabrics, to
   give the fabrics a smooth surface and fresh look
5. Stain removers; to remove stains from fabrics.
    LAUNDRY EQUIPMENT AND TOOLS
1. Equipment and tools for collecting dirty clothes: These
   include linen baskets or bins, laundry bags
2. Equipment and tools for washing: These include basins,
   buckets and laundry tubs or trays, they can be made of
   plastics, stainless steel or porcelain. We also have
   washing machine.
3. Equipment and tools for drying: clothes lines, movable
   clothes, horses or hangers, pegs etc.
4. Ironing or pressing equipment: These include the iron,
   ironing board, ironing pads etc.
 GENERAL GUIDELINES AND STEPS IN LAUNDERING
 Sorting
 Mending
 Stain removal
 Soaking and steeping
 Washing
 Rinsing
 Boiling
   Bluing and stiffening
   Drying
   Finishing or ironing
   Airing
 Folding and storage.
                      WEEK FIVE
CONTENT: BASIC ELEMENTS OF DESIGN
SUB-TOPIC: COLOUR WHEEL AND POINTS TO CONSIDER WHEN
CHOOSING COLOUR
LEARNING OBJECTIVES: At the end of the lesson, students
should be able to:
  i. List the element of design.
  ii. State the primary and secondary colours.
  iii. Make colour wheel
             THE BASIC ELEMENTS OF DESIGN
   LINE: refers to the outline of an object.
    | -vertical line    \ - diagonal line ----- horizontal
             ( -curve line
   SHAPE: refers to the form of a solid object which is
    created when lines are combined. The outline of a
    garment is its shape.
   SPACE: refers to the three dimensional area that is to be
    designed.it is the entire area within a garment.
   TEXTURE: this is the way the surface of a fabric looks and
    feels.
   COLOUR: is one of the most important elements that has
    many visual effects and its own language.
             COLOUR WHEEL
   Colour Wheel is the arrangement of colours in a circle to
   show how they are related.
1. PRIMARY COLOURS- red, yellow and blue.
2. SECONDARY COLOURS- orange, green, and purple/violet.
3. TERTIARY COLOURS- These are six and each is a blend of
   primary and secondary colours. They are red-violet, blue-
   violet, blue-green, yellow-green, yellow-orange and red-
   orange.
4. WARM COLOURS- These are red, yellow, orange, yellow-
   orange red-orange etc.
5. COOL COLOURS – These are blue, green, purple, blue-
   purple, blue-green e t c.
 POINTS TO CONSIDER WHEN CHOOSING COLOURS
1. Cool and dark colours make one look smaller than
   normal.
2. Warm and light /bright colours make one look larger
   than normal.
3. Bright contrasting colours draw attention to the figure
   therefore make one look larger than normal.
4. Black can be used with all colour except very dark brown
   because there will be no contrast.
5. White goes with every colour provided it is used
   sparingly.
6. Brown goes well with yellow, green, light blue, orange
   etc.
  7. Grey as neutral colour, it harmonizes with red, yellow,
     blue, green, orange and purple.
                 ASSIGNMENT
Home Economics for Junior Secondary School 1-3 by Elizabeth
Anyakoha Review Questions page 275 nos 1-10
                 WEEK SIX
CONTENT: Basic Element of Design
SUB-TOPIC: Different figure types and colour combination in
dresses
LEARNING OBJECTIVES: At the end of the lesson, students
should be able to:
  i.   State the different styles suitable for different figures.
ii.    Combine colours together to suit different figures.
               DIFFERENT FIGURE TYPES
       Figure in clothing construction means the body outline
       or shape of a person. No two persons are exactly alike.
       There are also figure faults and these can be concealed
       with suitable styles, colour and patterns of clothes.
       There are nine figure types based on their height and
       nape to waist. They are girls, Chubby, Teen/young,
       Junior petite, Junior, Miss Petite, Miss, Half size and
       Women.
  FIGURES              SUITABLE                UNSUITABLE/AVOID
    1. Tall and         i. Large flowery         i. Vertical
       slender               designs.                 stripes.
                        ii. Warm colours         ii. Tight
                        iii. Horizontal               dresses.
                             stripes.            iii. V-shaped
                                                      /low narrow
                                                      necklines.
      2. Short and       i.   Vertical           i. Fabrics with
         plump/stout          stripes.                large
                         ii. Lightweight              elaborate
                              fabrics.                prints.
                         iii. Cool colours.      ii. Large
                                                      sleeves
                                                 iii. Tight fitting
                                                      dresses with
                                             high collars
3. Flat chest   i.   Gathered and      i.    Fitted
                     draped styles.          bodice.
                ii. Bodice should      ii.   Too wide
                     have added              necklines.
                     fullness.
                iii. Bows, drapes
4. Large bust   i. V- shaped           i. high neckline
                     neckline          i. Full sleeves
                ii. Fitted sleeves     ii. Breast
                iii. Vertical lines          pocket
5. Short neck   i. Open neckline       i. Tie neck
                ii. V-shaped                 bands
                     neckline          ii. High polo-
                iii. U-shaped                necks
                     neckline          iii. Mandarin
                                             neckline
6. Long neck    i.   High neckline.    i. Wide or
                ii.  Turtle neck             boat-shaped
                iii. Frills at neck          necklines
7. Large hips   i.   Shaped skirt      i. Fitted skirt.
                     from waist.       ii. Pockets at
                ii. Gathers can be           hips.
                     used if the       iii. Too narrow
                     waist is small.         bodice
                iii. Straight
                     dresses with
                     no belt.
                    ASSIGNMENT
Home Economics for Junior Secondary School 1-3 by Elizabeth
Anyakoha Review Questions page 320 nos 1-8
                       WEEK SEVEN
CONTENT: Sewing Machine
SUB-TOPIC: Types, parts and faults
LEARNING OBJECTIVES: At the end of the lesson, students
should be able to:
  i. Identify different types of sewing machine
  ii. Pin point parts of sewing machine and their functions
  iii. State ways of caring for sewing machine.
                   SEWING MACHINE
  The sewing machine is major sewing equipment. It is
  very important in successful sewing. There are
  different types and maker of sewing machines. The
  following are common types of sewing machines.
  1. HAND SEWING MACHINE: This is a simple machine
     operated just with hand. It requires to be placed on
     a table.
2. TREADLE SEWNG MACHINE: This is operated with
   the feet. The worker has both hands free for
   guiding the work. It normally has a special stand.
3. ELECTRIC SEWING MACHINE: This is operated with
   the aid of an electric motor.
       PARTS OF A SEWING MACHINE
 MACHINE PARTS              FUNCTIONS
1. Balance wheel         Turned either forward
                         or backward to make
                         the machine sew.
2. aPresser foot         Holds the fabric firmly
                         in place for stitching.
3. Presser foot lifter   Used to raise and lower
                         the presser foot. It is at
                         the back of the
                         machine.
4. Feed-dog              Holds fabric tight
                       against the presser
                       foot.
5. Spoon pin           Holds the spool of the
                       thread.
6. Stitch regulator    Used to shorten or
                       lengthen the stitches of
                       the machine.
7. Bobbin              Used for winding the
                       thread which goes in
                       the lower part of the
                       machine.
8. Bobbin case         It is the case that holds
                       the bobbin.
9. Tension discs       Regulates the tightness
                       of the thread as it forms
                       the stitch.
10.    Thread guides   Prevents the thread
                       from twisting and
                       support the thread from
                       one part of the machine
                       to another.
11.    Throat plate    Provides opening
                       through which the
                       needle projects down-
                       ward and the feed-dog
                       upward.
12.
CARE AND MAINTENANCE OF SEWING MACHINE
1. Study the machine handbook (manual) carefully.
2. Clean the machine often by dusting to remove, dirt
and dust.
3. Oil the necessary point according to the hard book.
4. Cover the machine when not in use.
5. Do not scratch the plain work of machine by using
sharp object like scissors on it.
6. Disconnect the belt of a treadle machines to enable
the encasement of the machine in its box.
       COMMON MACHINE PROBLEMS
1. Regulating the thread tension.
2. Imperfect stitching.
3. Skipped stitching
4. Breaking of machine needle.
5. Constant breaking of thread.
6. Puckers in fabrics.
        ARRANGEMENT OF FULLNESS
Fullness in clothing construction means the provision of
extra allowance in the garment. They are darts, tucks,
gathers, easing and pleats.
                 DARTS
Darts are tapered folds of fabric stitched on the wrong
side of a garment section. Darts can be straight, curved
or doubled pointed.
              USES OF DARTS
  1. They control fullness.
  2. They turn that fabric into shapes to fit the human
     figure.
  3. They help to give a good fitting and shape to the
     finished garment.
                TUCKS
Tucks are special stitched folds made in garment
stitched for all or part of the length. The fold is formed
on the right side of the garment. When tucks are partly
stitched, they are called dart tucks.
              USES OF TUCKS
  1. To reduce or control fullness.
  2. To provide extra width.
  3. To decorate a garment as a style feature.
  4. They can be used to hide a join in the fabric
                  GATHERS
Gathers are small, soft folds made in garment
commonly used in children’s clothes and lightweight
skirts. Gathers can be made either with hand or
machine.