Wild Fibres natural fibres > Silk & silk fibre > why buy silk?
2. Silk is shiny and has unequalled lustre
Silk fibres are like smooth glass rods and slightly triangular in cross section. This smoothness and prism-like quality makes silk good at reflecting light, giving it a great sheen.
Back to Top
4. Silk comes in brilliant colours
Silk is made by an animal and it is a protein fibre. Protein fibres take natural dyes better than the cellulose fibres from plants. Silk takes dyes particularly well producing luminescent and brilliant colours that shine like jewels. Mulberry silk, which is white, gives you purer colours. Tussah silk has tannin and the natural honey colour can give greater depth to the colour.
Back to Top
5. Silk is smooth and sensuous
In contrast to wool, silk is extruded on demand and has no cellular structure. This makes silk very smooth and sensuous to the touch. Under the microscope, you can see that wool is covered in scales like tiles on a roof, while linen appears to have joints similar to the nodes on a bamboo. Wool, cotton and linen are all growing fibres and they all have a cellular structure.
6. Silk has great strength
Silk is a very long, continuous fibre, up to 1,300 metre in length, which gives it great strength. This makes it possible to weave very light fabrics, as even fine silk yarns are strong. Wool, cotton and linen yarns are made of short lengths of fibre which are overlapped at the ends and therefore not so strong.
Back to Top
7. Silk is great in blends
Silk adds lustre, drape, softness and strength to fibre blends. You need a blend with at least 30% of silk to be able to feel the silk and 50% to both feel and see the silk. Silk blends well with many fibres, giving you the best of both fibres. Try blending silk with wool, alpaca, camel, and even cotton. You may find it easier to use tussah silk in blends than mulberry silk.
8. Silk has a rich history
Silk has a very long and interesting history. Silk has been used for over 5,000 years in China, and for much of this time it was surrounded by myth and secrecy. Anyone caught trying to smuggle silkworms from China faced the death penalty. The ‘Silk Road’ was a very important land-based trade route for nearly two thousand years.
More info coming soon!
Back to Top
9. Silk is an exclusive fibre
Wool production is about 2 million tonnes whilst cotton is 25 million tonnes. In comparison, silk is an exclusive fibre. The worldwide production of silk is about 100 thousand tonnes, with China being the main producer, followed by India and other countries. The rearing of silk worms and reeling of silk is a labour intensive process which is reflected in the price of silk.
Teresinha at Wild Fibres
Studio I-319, Scott House, The Custard Factory
Gibb Street, Birmingham B9 4DT, UK
Contact Teresinha for enquiries on
Tel: +44 (0)7979 770865
email: info@wildfibres.co.uk
Delivery charges in the UK
Delivery in Europe & rest of World here
Last updated on 25 July 2019
Website and photos by Mike Roberts © 2008-19 Wild Fibres