-40%

2 Yards Silk Ribbon 1.25" POWDER BLUE / SILK COTTAGE RIBBON 1 1/4" Inch

$ 2.1

Availability: 12 in stock
  • Width: 1 1/4"
  • Material: Silk
  • Unit of Sale: 2 YARDS
  • Color: POWDER BLUE
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Ribbon Type: 100% SILK
  • Brand: SILK COTTAGE
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days
  • Condition: New

    Description

    SILK COTTAGE
    2 Yards Silk Ribbon
    1 1/4" Width
    POWDER BLUE
    COMBINED SHIPPING ON ALL SILKS!
    1.  Select COLOR(S) & QUANTITIES.  (More you buy; more you SAVE!)
    2.  Add to CART.  Continue shopping; when finished:
    3.  Request total.  (Upper right hand corner.)
    4.  Receive NEW INVOICE
    w/ SHIPPING DISCOUNT!
    "Silk is beautiful and highly desirable.  Do you know how it's produced?"
    Production of SILK goes back hundreds of years.
    Silkworms are the offspring of
    moths
    . They spew out thread from tiny holes in their jaws, which they use to spin into their
    egg-bearing
    cocoons
    . This entire production takes a mere 72 hours, during which time they produce between 500-1200
    silken
    threads. These miniature,
    mulberry
    leaf-munching
    marvels
    lay, at minimum, 500 eggs each spring, thereby increasing the number of workers for the production line.
    The ancient Chinese
    unearthed
    the silkworm's secret, and were the first to spin the silkworm's threads into cloth. They kept this
    covert
    , top-secret operation, from the rest of the world by imposing the death sentence upon those who smuggled the worm or its eggs out of China. Eventually, however, the secret was out, and silkworms are now
    farmed
    for their silk, in China, of course, in Japan, in India, in France, in Spain, and in Italy. These countries harness the power of the silkworm through a tedious, labor-intensive, time-consuming process, a process which prominently figures into the price of silk.
    Farm workers
    painstakingly
    place the 500 plus eggs the
    grayish-white
    moth lays, upon strips of paper or cloth, until the following spring, when the incubated eggs hatch, and the tiny, black worms emerge. Once hatched, workers transport the worms to trays brimming with the worm's favorite
    fodder
    of finely chopped, white mulberry leaves. After approximately 6 weeks, the satiated worms begin slowly to sway their heads back and forth to signal that show time is
    at hand
    .
    Once the silkworm completes its cocoon, the farmer snatches his cocoon from him, to prevent the
    shrunken chrysalis
    , carefully encased inside, from hatching into a moth in 12 days. The silk farmers ensure that this event does not
    transpire
    , and does not kill his moneymaking venture, by exposing the cocoons to heat, thereby executing the chrysalis. Now, the silkworm's labor of love is prepared for the silk production process.
    The process begins by bathing the now-empty cocoons in troughs of warm water, which serves to soften the gum binding the silken
    filaments
    together. He now proceeds with the arduous task of unraveling several cocoons, and winding the filaments onto a
    reel
    that twists 10-12 filaments together into a "single" thread of silk. The end product is a skein of
    raw silk
    , which the farmer profits from by selling to the highest bidder.