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History of
silk
No one knows for sure when
silk was discovered. According to a Chinese legend, it was discovered
about 2700 B. C. in the garden of Emperor Huang-Ti. The Emperor ordered
his wife, Hsi-Ling-Shi, to find out what was damaging his mulberry trees.
Hsi-Ling-Shi found white worms eating the
mulberry leaves and spinning shiny cocoons. She accidentally dropped a
cocoon into hot water. As she played with the cocoon in the water, a
delicate, cobwebby tangle separated itself from the cocoon. His-Ling-Shi
drew it out and found that one slender thread was unwinding itself from
the cocoon. She had discovered silk.
Hsi-Ling- Shi persuaded her husband to give
her a grove of mulberry trees, were she could grow thousands of worms that
spun such beautiful cocoons. It is said that Hsi-Ling-Shi invented the
silk reel, which joined these fine filaments into thread thick and strong
enough for weaving.
No one knows how much, if any, of the story is
true. But historians do know that silk was first used in China. The
Chinese guarded the secret of the silk worm. Disgrace and death faced the
traitor who disclosed the origin of silk to the outside world. Only the
Chinese knew how to make silk for about 3,000 years.
Silk Making
Spreads
China carried on a profitable silk trade with
western nations in the days of the Han Dynasty (founded in 202 B.C).
Traders from ancient Persia (now Iran) bought richly colored silks from
Chinese merchants. Camel caravans blazed routes across Asia, transporting
silk from china to Damascus, the market place at which east met. From
Damascus, silk was taken to the Roman Empire, where there were riches to
exchange for it.
As early as the 300’s B.C., the western world
heard rumors of the strange worm that spun silk threads. Bit no one in the
west saw the worm until A.D. 550. At the time, Persia controlled all silk
that came out of China. Persians sold it at fabulously high
prices.
The Roman, or Byzantine, emperor Justinian
objected to paying high prices to the Persians. In about 550, he tried
unsuccessfully to find a trade route from Constantinople (now Istanbul) to
China that would bypass Persia. He later sent two monks to China as spies.
Risking death the monks smuggled out silkworms eggs and mulberry seeds in
hollow bamboo canes. This adventure ended the Chinese and Persian silk
monopolies.
During the next few hundred years, various
peoples learned how to raise silkworms and take silk from the cocoons. The
Muslims brought silkworms to Spain and Sicily in the 800’s and 900’s. By
the 1200’s, Italy had become the silk center of the west. Silk weaving
began in France in the late 1400’s. The French soon rivaled the Italians
as silk manufacturers.
Silk weaving became an important industry in
England after large number of skilled Flemish weavers entered the country
in the late 1500’s. The first silk factory in the United States was built
in Mansfield, Connecticut in 1810.
(Source: The World Book
Encyclopedia)
Silk
Glossary
| Brocade silk |
A woven silk, rich with interwoven design,
decorated with gold and silver thread. |
| Charmeuse silk |
Luxurious, a popular dress silk. It has a
shiny satin face and dull back. The fabric is soft in feeling and
drapes very well. |
| Chiffon silk |
This fabric is softer, thinner, sheer and
transparent. Woven from tightly twisted yarn and has crepe like
texture drapes beautifully. |
| China Silk - (Habotai)
|
The term means soft as down in Japanese.
This fabric is smooth even weave it comes in various weights from
light to heavy. |
| Crepe silk |
Crepe is heavier and more textured then
crepe-de-chine, but not as slippery. The heavier most luxuries
fabrics, and are made from three or four ply yarns. |
| Crepe-de-chine
silk |
Crepe-de-chine has a smooth slippery
surface. It drapes beautifully and is available in several
weights. |
| Doupioni (Duppione)
silk |
Silk reeled from double cocoons. Silk
doupioni is a crisp fabric with irregular slubs in the yarn, Most
popular silk for wedding gowns. |
| Faille silk |
Ribbed silk with crosswise rib effect.
Fabric is lightweight, soft in feel and a slightly
grainy. |
| Georgette silk |
This fabric is thin and soft and has a
grainy sheer texture. It drapes
beautifully. |
| Iridescent silk |
color effect made by the use of warp ends
and filling picks of varying tint or hue in
weaving. |
| Jacquard silk |
This fabric is smooth, elegant and is made
on a jacquard loom. The fabric has a soft or slightly crisp hand
depending on the weave. |
| Jersey silk |
A close-fitting knitted silk suitable for
gloves lingerie and sportswear. |
| Silk Linen |
Silk linen is often woven by hand. It is
an all silk fabric or silk/linen blend that has been woven To look
like linen. It has a basket weave. |
| Lame |
A silk brocade woven fabric embroidered
with metal thread |
| Noil silk |
This fabric is often called raw silk, it
has been labeled inaccurately. Raw silk is reeled from the cocoon,
which contains its original gum or serin. Silk noil has a dull
finish and is made from the shorter fibbers separated from the
longer ones during the process of combing. |
| Momme |
Japanese weight equal to 3.75 grams. 25
yards x 1.49 inches of one momme silk weights 3.75
grams |
| Moiré |
Cloth has the desirable watermarked effect
in the finished fabric. |
| Natural fibers |
silk and wool is animal fibers, cotton and
hemp are plant fibers. |
| Organza silk |
This fabric is thin, transparent and crisp
and is plainly woven. Fabric may crush or muss but is easily
pressed. |
| Peau de soie
silk |
This fabric has a dull satin finish. It
has a moderate stiff drape that falls in to wide
cones |
| Raw silk |
Silk reeled from the cacoon, which
contains its original gum or serin. |
| Sandwashed silk |
Any silk fabric that has been treated to
an abrasive wash, using send and
chemicals. |
| Sericulture |
the art and science of raising silk worms
for the production of silk. |
| Silk |
the very fine fiber produced by the silk
moth caterpillar when it makes its cocoon. Silken twine is made from
the fibers and this can be woven to make
fabrics. |
| Surah silk |
A soft, twill woven
silk |
| Taffeta |
This fabric is supposed to have originated
in Persia. The fabric is smooth, tightly woven with fine warp yarn
and has a plain weave. Silk Taffeta has a crisp drape. This fabric
comes in various weights. |
| Tussah (Tasar or Tassar)
silk |
Fabric made with silk from uncultivated or
wild Tussah silk warm. |
| Velvet silk |
This fabric has a soft, limp hand and a very fragile
pile that crushes easily. |
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