Organic cotton rope
Corde coton BIO ***DESTOCKAGE***
Recycled cotton rope
Cotton braid
Polished hemp rope
Unpolished hemp rope
Coloured hemp rope
Corde chanvre ***DESTOCKAGE***
Jute braided rope
Tresse jute âme coton
Jute twine
Sisal rope
Sisal twine
Coconut coir rope
Polished linen twine
Merino wool roving
Chunky Superwash wool
Macrame cotton rope - FR
Macrame cotton rope 100m - Handcrafted
Macrame cotton rope - Recycled
Macrame cotton rope - Prestige
Macrame cotton cord - FR
Macrame cotton cord - Recycled
Air cotton cord - Prestige
Coton tressé
Macrame cotton string - FR
Macrame cotton string - Recycled
Macrame cotton string - Prestige & organic
Macrame cotton string - Prestige
Coton peigné prestige ***DESTOCKAGE***
Macrame bamboo string - Prestige
Waxed cotton cord
Linen air cord - Prestige
Braided cotton yarn - Tuscany
Cotton twine
Mercerised cotton yarn
Tricolor cotton rope
Magician cotton rope
Bleached cotton cord
Tug of war rope
Indoor knotted climbing rope
Indoor climbing rope
Sawmill sisal rope 8 strands
We answer you
Natural ropes are used in various areas such as decoration, macramé, crochet, crafts, furniture, events, adventure parks, security, industry and agriculture.
Many natural fibres are used to make rope:
- hemp
- cotton
- sisal
- jute
- linen
- coconut fibre
The strongest material is hemp. The most used materials in decoration are cotton and jute.
Natural rope can be used outdoors but it is not recommended to store your natural rope in the sun and weather permanently. It will degrade in the long run and may even eventually break.
Like any natural material, the natural rope is sensitive to weather, moisture and UV rays.
The softest natural rope is cotton rope. If you are looking for sweetness, you will also find it with the hemp rope.
In general, all natural ropes are soft. The only rough and grainy fibre is sisal.
The strongest natural rope is hemp rope.
The strongest natural string is linen twine.