Tell me more ×
Mi Yodeya is a question and answer site for those who base their lives on Jewish law and tradition and anyone interested in learning more. It's 100% free, no registration required.

Are mesh Tztzis allowed and can you make a Bracha on them, also are the ones made of Plastic allowed and can you make a Bracha on them and then combined meaning Synthetic mesh Tztzis are they allowed and can you makes a Bracha?

share|improve this question
What do you mean by "net"? – Shalom Sep 2 '10 at 12:11
1  
I think he means "mesh." – Isaac Moses Sep 2 '10 at 15:13
They make plastic tzitzit? – Adam Mosheh Apr 27 '12 at 16:09

3 Answers

up vote 4 down vote accepted

Do you mean tzitzis on a mesh garment? I don't see the problem, why should we care what kind of weave it is? The majority of coverage is cloth not air.

As for synthetics, here's a piece from Rabbi Heinemann's Star-K article:

... it is the opinion of a leading Torah authority that garments woven with synthetic fibers do not require tzitzis. This means that a polyester or rayon garment does not require tzitzis. What about a wool-rayon blend, which is a blend of natural and synthetic fibers? The criteria for determining tzitzis obligation is which of the two fabrics covers the majority of fabric area. If, for example, the fabric is a 50-50 blend of natural and synthetic fibers, but the synthetic thread is thicker than the natural, then the garment would not require tzitzis. Wearing an Arba Kanfos (beged with tzitzis) made of synthetic fabric would present the problems stated earlier: 1) non-fulfillment of the mitzvah, 2) uttering a blessing in vain, 3) carrying on Shabbos.

I think most of the cotton-poly blends I've seen are something like 75% cotton, so they should be the same halachically as 100% cotton. (Is polyester thread usually thicker than cotton thread? Anyone here a textile maven?)

R' Moshe Feinstein's responsum concerning cotton tzitzis addresses the question of synthetics as well; if I recall, he points to the Rambam who says there's no mitzva of tzitzis on leather garments. Usually a leather garment isn't woven; now you could cut strands of leather and weave them, but I think R' Moshe says it's likely that because leather starts off as a sheet and not fibers, there's no mitzva even if you do weave it. I think R' Moshe argues the same for synthetics (don't recall if he leaves it as a question, or concludes stringently); if R' Moshe is stringent, that's most likely the "leading Torah authority" cited by R' Heinemann.

share|improve this answer
Certain ones are very much more holes the garment and there is a requirement that you be able to walk out into the street and wear it as a covering independently meaning it has to serve as a shirt something with that many holes is not a shirt but it sure is cooler. in the summer – SimchasTorah Sep 2 '10 at 23:54
1  
TBDE, that statement is referring to the length and width of the garment. If it referred to the style of the garment, you would pasul a regular talis katan, too. – YDK Sep 3 '10 at 0:50

I think you can't make a mesh tallis katan according to the tshuva by Rav Moshe cited by Shalom because what material there is does not require tzitzis.

And I'm wondering, since the Gemara says a garment that's so small you would be embarrassed to walk around in it outside does not require tzitzis, wouldn't that apply to one of these mesh tzitzis garments?

share|improve this answer
Ben, your question would best be expressed as a comment on the original question, or possibly as a question in its own right if you provide more specific information about the sources to which you refer. – WAF May 11 '11 at 15:13
Ben, see my comment to [TBDE] SimchasTorah above. – YDK May 11 '11 at 15:51

Rav BenTzion Aba Shaul (Or Lesion vol. 2 ch. 2) said not to make a Beracha on mesh begadim.

share|improve this answer

Your Answer

 
discard

By posting your answer, you agree to the privacy policy and terms of service.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.