|

Silk
is an amazing fabric! It is stronger than steel, yet can
be spun and woven into the most delicate and luxurious of fabrics.
The silk fiber is also triangular in shape, which gives it unique
light reflecting properties resulting in its beautiful
sheen. Even though it is both compact and lightweight, it is
able to keep you incredibly warm in the cold as well as
nice and cool in warm temperatures.

All
MaryGreen/Mansilk products have a "care label." The
care instructions should be followed if you wish to maintain
the garment's characteristics.
TO
DRY CLEAN: Inform
the Dry Cleaner that your garment is made from silk so that it
will not be cleaned with heavier garments that could harm your
silk garment. Some Dry Cleaners use solutions that are not best
for silks. Be sure to let your dry cleaner know you prefer to
have your silk garments cleaned with the appropriate solution.
TO
HAND WASH:
Wash in cool water. Use a mild detergent such as Mary Green Angel
Soap™. Only a small amount of soap is needed as silk resists
soiling. Rinse very well in cold water. Hang or lay flat to dry
in shade. If pressing is required, press on wrong side of fabric.
A low to moderate steam setting may be used or the fabric may
be pressed while still damp (dry setting: low to medium). We suggest
that you use an all cotton ironing board cover. DO
NOT USE BLEACH OR PRODUCTS THAT CONTAIN BLEACH.
PLEASE
NOTE:
Some silks may shrink slightly when washed. Garments made with
delicate fabrics such as georgette, gauze, and chiffon, garments
made with a combination of fabrics or garments that are highly
detailed probably should not be machine washed.
To clean
your more delicate fabrics such as georgette, gauze, and chiffon,
first wash the garments in tepid water with a mild detergent such
as Mary Green Angel Soap. Do not wring,
but lay on a towel and roll up, squeezing moisture into the towel.
Hang or lay flat to dry in the shade. When nearly dry press with
a warm iron, stretching the fabric slightly. Repeat as needed,
taking care to be gentle with this delicate fabric. Some of these
items may be more delicate and may benefit from dry cleaning as
opposed to washing. Should you wash these lighter fabrics, they
may appear to be smaller after washing, but will return to their
original size and shape when they are lightly and gently ironed.
Irregularities
and variations in weave of silk fabrics are characteristic and
are not to be considered defective.

Did
you know that silk is one of the oldest known textile fibers?
According to Chinese historians, the first loose end of a silk
fiber from a silkworm cocoon was discovered accidentally by
the Chinese Empress Si Ling-chi in 2698 B.C. The word silk is
actually derived from her name. Only the Empress and her
ladies knew how silk was produced and divulging the secret
meant torture and death. For about 30 centuries the
gathering and weaving of silk was a secret process, known
only to the Chinese.
During
the Christian era, silk was one of the most costly items in
trade between the Roman Empire and the Orient. It was truly a
mark of the wealthy. In 550 AD, the Emperor Justinian sent two Persian
monks to China to bring back the means for producing silk
to Constantinople. The monks had learned the secret of silk-making
while residing in China. Using hollow bamboo canes, they
smuggled some silkworm eggs into Greece. This was a very
dangerous assignment. If the eggs had been discovered in
the staffs, the monks would surely have been put to death
by the Chinese. The secret was out and eventually silk
began to be produced in various parts of Europe. In the
late 17th century French weavers brought the art to England, and
the first silk mill in the United States was erected in 1810. The
silkworm, however, has never flourished in either climate.

Did
you know that a silkworm isn't really a worm, but is actually a
caterpillar? Many caterpillars produce silk, but none like
the caterpillar of the Asian silkworm moth known as "Bombyx
Mori." It can spin a single strand of silk fiber into
a cocoon that is several thousand feet in length. It has been
reported that the Chinese or Mulberry silkworm has spun cocoons
that contained more than two miles of silk! Tapping this
supply of silk involves finding a loose end and a lot of unwinding!
Sericulture,
or the raising of silkworms, begins with the incubation of the
eggs of the silkworm moth. After they hatch and become worms,
they are fed chopped mulberry leaves. For six weeks, the
worms eat almost continuously. The worms then climb branches
and make their cocoons in one continuous thread, taking
about eight days. The cocoons are heated in boiling water to dissolve
the gummy substance that holds the cocoon filament in place.
The filaments from four to eight cocoons are joined and twisted
and are then combined with a number of other similarly twisted
filaments to make a thread that is wound on a reel. When each
cocoon is unwound, it is replaced with another cocoon. The resulting
continuous thread, called raw silk, consists usually of 48
individual silk fibers. One or more threads of the raw silk
are then twisted into a strand sufficiently strong for
weaving or knitting.
The
silk fabric is then ready to be made into the world's greatest
underwear by Mary Green!

FAMILY:
Bombycidae
GENUS: Bombyx
SPECIES: mori
|