Natural Gut
Cleaned, twisted, dried, and coated
Natural gut starts as collagen-based serosa fibers. Those fibers are cleaned, sorted, twisted into strands, dried under tension, polished, and coated. That labor-heavy process is a big reason natural gut is expensive.
Polyester / Co-Poly
Melted and extruded through a die
Poly strings are typically made by melting raw material pellets and pushing that material through a die to form a monofilament. After that, the string is cooled, stretched, heat-treated, and often coated or textured.
Synthetic Gut
Solid core with wraps
Most synthetic guts start with an extruded nylon core. One or more outer wraps are then added around that core, followed by a finish or coating to help durability, feel, and stringing behavior.
Multifilament
Microfibers bundled together
Multifilaments are built from thousands of tiny fibers that are twisted, bundled, braided, or bonded together with resin or polyurethane. That soft, fiber-rich construction is why multis often feel more elastic and comfortable.
Aramid / Kevlar
High-strength fibers spun for durability
Kevlar-style strings use very strong aramid fibers. The goal here is usually durability more than comfort, so these strings are often paired with a softer cross rather than used as a full bed.
Shaped and Textured Strings
Geometry and finish can be added late
A string does not need a completely different material to feel different. A shaped extrusion die, a roughened finish, or a low-friction coating can all change how the string grabs the ball and slides against the crosses.