Any individual who has spent more than fifteen minutes in a textile store or involved in any way with wholesale textiles is aware they can be made by a plethora of different materials. Some of these materials you've undoubtedly heard of, while a few others will almost certainly have you scratching your head. "Animal Textiles" are typically made from the hair or fur of a domestic creature. These discount textiles are usually taken from, but not limited to, goats and sheep. The wool is unique from other kinds of animal furs because individual strands can be taken and coated with the necessary materials. However, many a textile store will also feature discount textiles made from the hair or fur of alpacas, vicunas, llamas, and camelsThat being said, silk technically is an animal textile as well, being created with materials in the cocoon of the Chinese silkworm. These sleek, shiny wholesale textiles are unarguably the most popular of animal textiles. Animals are not the only source for wholesale textiles. Plant textiles are used for a plethora of different objects, including floor mats, doormats, mattresses, floor tiles, sacks, paper and a plethora of different clothing. Wholesale textiles made from plants are created using materials from grass, rush, hemp, and sisal. When dealing with grass and rush, creates of the textile can use the entire plant. Only fibers from the plant can be used for making textiles out of hemp and sisal, however. Many people are not aware that a piece of paper is technically a textile. Materials from trees, cotton, rice, hemp, and nettle are the base for creating a sheet of paper. The most well known use of plant textile, however, would have to be clothing. While cotton is King when it comes to wholesale textiles used for clothing, the fact remains that flax, jute, modal, hemp, and on occasion, bamboo fibers can all be used to create clothing. Mineral Textiles also exist. While many people spend thousands of dollars trying to remove asbestos from textile store homes, the truth is it can be used for a series of discount textiles, typically used for things such as acoustical ceilings, stage curtains, and fire blankets. That's right, if you were to catch on fire, a long all-encompassing blanket made of moldy asbestos might be the only thing to save your life. And of course, as with most materials (and nearly everything in the world today), there are also synthetic textiles. A long list of elements belongs in this extended list of discount textiles, including polyester, nylon, spandex, lurex, acrylic, aramid, twaron, and even milk proteins.