The diagram illustrates the process of manufacturing clothes from plastic bottles, beginning with plastic bottle usage and ending with fully woven clothes.
Overall, this is a linear, multi-stage procedure which involves major prerequisites, including disposing, transporting, sorting, cutting, washing, drying, boiling, straining, weaving, and rolling.
Initially, consumers dispose of their used plastic bottles, then a truck transports them to factories for further management. From there, the bottles are thoroughly sorted to ensure the productivity and order. Afterwards, they enter a chamber which shreds the bottles to smaller fragments for meticulous precision. Subsequently, the bits are positioned inside a container which carefully washes the pieces, later placed outside the sun for drying for approximately 10 hours.
Thereafter, the dried materials enter a cylindrical machine for boiling. Next, the liquid is poured inside several tubes for straining, which is later threaded into yarn. Once that is done, the yarn is later woven into several rolls, which effectively manufactures new clothing, ready for consumers.
