Elizabetta - silk chiffon scarves, silk scarves, chiffon wraps About Silk Scarves and Silk Production: |
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A silk scarf is one fashion accessory that offers endless possibilities for enhancing your wardrobe. Silk scarves range from lightweight to delicate and gossamer light (chiffon scarves and chiffon wraps), they drape beautifully and can be worn in countless ways, for example, as a shawl, an accent piece, a head covering and belts and sashes.
They can add flair and dash to a style, or can add a subtle, refined accent. They can be tied, secured with a jewelry broach, or left to flow gently.
Click on the links below to learn more about:
Cashmere
and pashmina
About wool
The history
of silk
How
to care for your scarf or shawl
HOW SILK IS MADE:
For centuries silk has rightfully enjoyed a reputation as a luxurious and sensuous fabric, one associated with wealth and success. It is one of the oldest textile fibers known to man.
Cultivation is a difficult process that begins with the silk moth. The moth lays hundreds of eggs about the size of a pinhead that are examined and discarded if they are diseased. The eggs are then put in cold storage for six to ten months until the mulberry trees bud.
After
incubation, the eggs hatch into larvae. For about a month these larvae
live in a carefully controlled environment eating cleaned,
chopped mulberry leaves.
They grow quickly and become caterpillars called silk worms. The silk worm
is quite discerning about its environment. If the conditions are less than
ideal, the silkworm produces inferior silk, or no silk.
The
silkworm then starts to spin a cocoon for itself to protect it while it transforms
into a moth. A single cocoon yields 1,600 - 5280 feet of continuous filament.
It is this length of fiber that makes silk fabric unlike any other type of
fiber.
SILK
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Is the strongest
natural fiber. A steel filament of the same diameter as silk
will break before a filament of silk will. |
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Is porous,
which allows it to breathe and absorb moisture. Therefore
it’s cool in the summer, and warm in the winter. |
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Is easy to
dye and takes on deep colors beautifully. Often silk is dyed
in bright or iridescent colors. Depending on the weave, silk
prints often look almost as good on the back side as on the
front. |
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Reflects the
light because of its smooth fiber. This creates luster and
beauty. |
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Silk is tough.
Tougher than cotton and fine wool. It also has a natural
resistance to mold. |
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Retains its
shape, drapes beautifully, and has a silky feel all its own. |
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