Where does it start silk fabric journey?
How Silk Fabric Comes
To Life?
It all starts with
these guys. Silk Fabric is
an animal protein fiber produced by certain insects, like worms and
spiders, to build their cocoons and webs Silk Fabric Ugly to some, these little silk worms are the
very beginning of the incredible journey to making some of the most stunning Fabric Design out
there – just check out the silk range on Offset Warehouse if you
don’t believe me Net Design.
The “silkworm” is technicality
not a worm but a moth pupa. They are always attribute to as worms, however, and
I’m happy to go with the majority on that one! These appropriate worms
are called Bombyx Mori,
the mulberry silk moth, so-called because they feed on mulberry
leaves. They are a breed of silk worm that relies on human intervention to survive
– they are domesticated Embroidery Fabric.
This practice of breeding
the silkworm for the management of silk is known as sericulture.
It’s indecisive as to when sericulture first began,
but it’s certainly been at least 5000 years, which is when it was taking
place in China. From there, it dissemination to Korea and Japan, and later
to India and the West. Over millennia, the silkworm was slowly agreeable
from the wild silk moth, Bombyx Mandarina.
As I intimated, many insects produce
silk, but only the filament produced by this Bombyx mori and a few others
in the same species is used by the commercial silk industry Georgette designs.
Eggs take around 14 days to hatch into larvae,
which eat frequently – literally bushels and bushels of mulberry
leaves! The worm manure are black (why you’d want to know that, I’ve no idea,
but I thought it was important). There are lots of phases of the larvae,
as they hatch from tiny pin head size and grow into these big
old worms (well, 30 day old worms to be precise). When the color of their heads
turns darker, you know that they are almost “moult“.
After the first moult, the instar phase of the silkworm begins Embroidery
Fabric.
But
what exactly is this fiber made of Silk fabric?
Silkworms have salivary glands
called sericteries, which are used for the production
of fibroin – a clear, viscous, protein fluid that is
forced through an opening in their heads called the spinneret. The
diameter of the spinneret actuate the thickness of the silk thread (or micron),
which is produced as a long, continuous filament. A second pair of glands disguise
a gummy binding fluid called sericinwhich binds the
two filaments together. Why did I tell you all that? Well, the sericin is
tricky to get off and this forms part of the production process later on Designer Fabric Online.
The
cocoons are then ensconce into a shallow, woven basket made of bamboo,
like the one below. You may find a wood engraving of a cat on the basket –
particularly in superstitious areas. This is because mice often climb to the mantelpiece
of silkworms for a tasty treat, and cats
make excellent deterrents! This is a bit like putting a fake
heron next to our ponds in the UK… although I can’t imagine a picture of a
cat does much deterring to a mouse. In any case, that’s why you adequacy
find that not only do the sericulturists endure to put pictures of
cats in their baskets, but they also nearly always raise cats.
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