1. Different continuity: wide fabrics can be designed in a large area more conveniently because of their large width, avoiding splicing and making more continuous and smooth patterns, while narrow fabrics need splicing to make large curtains or clothes, and the performance of relative fluency is not as good as wide fabrics.
2. Different costs: wide fabric is relatively short in length because of its large width, but it is more expensive, while narrow fabric is relatively long, so the unit price is lower. In addition, wide fabric is more expensive, but it has better yield and fabric utilization.