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http://organicclothing.blogs.com/my_weblog/2007/03/raw_organic_sil.html

Organic_Clothing <http://organicclothing.blogs.com/my_weblog/>

Raw & Organic Silk: Facts behind the Fibers

 

<http://organicclothing.blogs.com/.shared/image.html?/photos/uncategorized/indig\

o_handloom_scarf_1.jpg>

*Silk, the " Queen of Fiber " .* Darling of the haute couture set for the

luxurious feel and drape; villain of vegans and PeTA

<http://www.peta.org/>for the doomed silk worm who labors to spin the

fine fiber and then is

gassed or boiled alive. Even though silk is a natural fiber that has been

woven into fabric to dress China's Empresses since 2900 BC (back when the

entire world population <http://www.census.gov/ipc/www/worldhis.html> was

only 15 million people), silk is just starting to be proclaimed as a

" natural " fabric, but how organic, sustainable, ethical and healthy is silk?

 

 

*<http://organicclothing.blogs.com/.shared/image.html?/photos/uncategorized/mulb\

erryleaves.jpg>

" With

time and patience the mulberry leaf becomes a silk gown " – Ancient Chinese

Proverb.* The finest, most desirable silk comes from the mulberry silkworm,

which is actually a caterpillar and not a worm. Known as the *Bombyx

mori*by entomologists, the mulberry silk worm is a fascinating but

tragic bundle

of insect life. Raised by professional keepers in China on trays of mulberry

leaves a thousand years before the Roman Empire when wild tribes were

roaming Europe living in stick and mud huts, the mulberry silkworm has been

totally domesticated and can not live without humans for their care and

feeding. There are no wild silkworms or Bombyx mori moths that roam and feed

in the wild.

 

<http://organicclothing.blogs.com/.shared/image.html?/photos/uncategorized/silkm\

oth.jpg>

Across

several thousand years of captive breeding, the Bombyx mori evolved into a

blind moth that cannot fly and lives only a few days during which it lays

about 500 eggs and then dies within four or five days. The silkworm moth has

even lost the ability to eat because of undeveloped structures within their

mouth.

 

<http://organicclothing.blogs.com/.shared/image.html?/photos/uncategorized/silkw\

orms.jpg>

A

Bombyx mori egg hatches in 10 days and becomes a larva – the silkworm

caterpillar. The silkworm larva will voraciously eat mulberry leaves almost

non-stop for 35 days increasing its weight 10,000 times from a tiny speck to

a chubby grub. Silkworms are very delicate and will go off their feed from

loud noises, temperature fluctuations of more than a few degrees above or

below 76 degrees, or even strong smells.

 

When it is full grown, the silk worm (called a pupae) climbs a twig and

begins spinning a cocoon. This stage of silkworm life is called pupating.

The silkworm produces a fibroin protein compound in two salivary glands

called sericteries that is mixed in the mouth of the silkworm with a gooey

substance called sericin and forced out through an opening in the silkworm's

under lip. When this stream of sticky fluid comes into contact with air, it

solidifies and becomes a continuous strand of silk that becomes the

silkworm's cocoon. The openings in the under lip of the silkworm are called

spinnerets and the process is very similar to spinning manmade " natural "

fibers such as viscose rayon or lyocell

Tencel<http://organicclothing.blogs.com/my_weblog/2005/11/tencel_sustaina.html>…

except that it is air for silk rather than an acid bath for viscose

and

lyocell that causes the fibers to solidify. The silkworm will spin a

thousand yards of silk fiber in three days to form its completely enclosed

cocoon. To fashion its cocoon, the silkworm will continually weave its head

in a figure eight pattern an estimated 300,000 times while continually

spinning and secreting its silk fiber. The cocoon will be the silkworm's

home for sixteen days as it morphs from a chubby grub to a furry, winged

moth. What an incredible marvel of Nature's intelligence!

 

<http://organicclothing.blogs.com/.shared/image.html?/photos/uncategorized/misso\

ni_silk_dress.jpg>

But

here the story turns down. When the transformation is complete, the newly

formed Bombyx mori moth secretes an alkali fluid that begins to dissolve a

hole in the cocoon so that the moth can emerge. The silk farmers do not want

their silk cocoons damaged so they kill the worms by tossing the cocoons

into boiling water or hot ovens before they transform into moths and emerge

from their cocoons. A small percentage of silkworms in cocoons are left to

live so that a few moths will emerge to lay the next generation of silk

machines. The sightless, flightless and toothless moth will mate almost

immediately after emerging from the cocoon and lay 500 silkworm eggs during

their first 4 or 5 days and then die. Total lifespan of the Bombyx mori is

about 70 days for those lucky few who are allowed to live and reproduce and

about 60 days for those unfortunate ones who are sacrificed for that

fabulous Italian silk scarf from Elizabetta <http://www.elizabetta.net/> or

Missoni 'Dianes' Lotus Print Dress ($2,935) from

Nordstrom<http://shop.nordstrom.com/>

..

 

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ulum.gif>

A

hugely developed industry, called sericulture, has developed around the

raising of silkworms for the production of silk. Silk worms are raised by

large corporate silk worm farmers and hobbyists all over the world.

Sericulture companies like Sericulum

<http://www.sericulum.com/index.html>sell and ship all that the silk

grower enthusiast needs from Bombyx mori ova

(silkworm eggs) in an incubation dish to handling tools. Silkworms eat only

mulberry leaves and you supply your own.

 

One silkworm produces very little useable silk. One acre of mulberry trees

produces enough foliage to feed silkworms that create 178 pounds of cocoons

which can be unraveled into 35 pounds of raw silk. The mulberry leaves are a

renewable and sustainable crop as the trees produce year after year. One

mature mulberry tree will produce enough foliage for 100 silkworms. The

Bombyx mori silkworm is univoltine which means that they only produce one

batch of eggs annually. When the eggs are laid, they enter a diapausal state

of suspended development (hibernation), often induced by refrigerating the

eggs for nine months. The silk worm farmers can induce the eggs to hatch at

a commercially convenient time.

 

*The modern Silk Road.* To continue the journey from the silkworm egg to the

display rack in Nordstrom or Neiman Marcus, dropping the cocoon in hot water

not only kills the silkworm, but also dissolves the sticky sericin coating

the silk fibers and holding the shape of the cocoon. Silk workers gently dry

and brush the outside of the cocoon to find the end of the silk fiber that

made the cocoon. The cocoon is carefully unraveled and wound around a spool.

Five to ten individual silk fibers from cocoons are wound together to form

one silk thread and several silk threads are wound together to form a yarn

of silk. This is raw silk, just pure silk fibers without any chemicals or

treatments added, although sometimes the raw silk fibers will be soaked in a

1% hydrogen peroxide solution for a few hours to refine the creamy color.

Organic and sustainable certification organizations are working on standards

for organic silk but they have not yet been finalized and adopted.

 

Up to this point in our journey down the modern Silk Road, our spool of raw

silk threads could easily be produced to comply with emerging sustainable

and organic standards for silk and be manufactured into silk eco-fashion and

organic clothing … except for this little problem – a 3 inch ethical problem

– the Bombyx mori silkworm that is gassed, steamed, or boiled alive to

prevent them from escaping from their cocoon as a moth by dissolving a hole

in the silk cocoon. To make one pound of the finest silk, 2600 silkworms

must die.

 

*<http://organicclothing.blogs.com/.shared/image.html?/photos/uncategorized/silk\

cocoons.jpg>

Peace

Silk or Vegetarian Silk.* Fortunately for those who love the feel, luster

and exceptional fabric properties of silk, there are other more ethical

options. Some Bombyx mori silk producers allow the moths to emerge from the

cocoon and then salvage the damaged cocoons. Because the one continuous silk

fiber woven by the silkworm has been broken into many smaller strands by the

emerging moth, the cocoon is degummed to remove the sericin and then spun

like other fibers such as cotton or hemp rather than being reeled onto

spools of one continuous silk strand. Because of the more humane harvesting

of these silk cocoons, this silk is often called peace silk or vegetarian

silk. This silk is slightly discolored by the alkaline solution secreted by

the moth to create the hole, and the peace silk is not as strong and has a

slightly different look and feel to the knowing designer or connoisseur than

conventional Bombyx mori silk. Because the peace silk is spun as a fiber

rather than reeled as a thread, it produces a fabric that is warmer and

softer.

 

Ahimsa

silk<http://www.abolitionist-online.com/article-issue02_ahimsa.peace.silk.shtml>\

is

also peace silk. Ahimsa peace silk often comes from the Eri Silk Moth

and the Tassar moth and comes mostly from India. The Ahimsa Peace Silk

project in India is working to help develop the peace silk industry in

India, train local artisians in the manufacturing of peace silks and raise

global awareness for ahimsa peace silks.

 

*Wild Silks.* The Bombyx mori silkworm is not the only silkworm that spins a

silk cocoon that can be used to produce silk fabric for silk clothing. There

are many species of wild silk caterpillars that produce silk cocoons used in

the production of silk fabrics, sometimes called " wild silks " or " peace

silks " because the silk caterpillars are allowed to live complete and

natural lives in the wild without being sacrificed for fashion. Most wild

silkworms are multivoltine, which means that they produce cocoons several

times during the year rather than just once a year like the Bombyx mori.

 

These wild caterpillars spin a silk that is different in texture and color

from the domesticated Bombyx mori and the wild silk cocoon strands are

shorter because they come from cocoons that have been damaged by the wild

silk moth's emergence from the cocoon. One of the highly desirable

properties of the Bombyx mori silk fibers due to the unique structure of

their fibroin protein is their exceptional ability to absorb dyes; wild silk

caterpillars secrete a slightly different protein structure and their silk

fibers tend to not accept dyes as well.

 

 

<http://organicclothing.blogs.com/.shared/image.html?/photos/uncategorized/muga_\

worms.jpg>Exquisitely

patterned wild silk fabrics are hand loomed in Thailand from the Saturniidae

silk worm, and throughout India from a variety of wild silk caterpillars.

One region of India that is especially noted for its exceptional and unique

silks is the far northeastern state of Assam, which borders Bangladesh.

Assam produces three different types of silk that are collectively known as

Assam silk but which vary greatly in appearance. The Assam

silks<http://www.assamsilks.com/>are Muga, Eri and Pat.

 

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Muga

(from the semi-domesticated silkworm *Antherea assamensis*) is renowned for

its glossy fine texture, durability and natural golden amber glow. Reputed

to be the second most costly fabric after Pashmina, Muga silk looks like

spun gold and for 600 years only the royal families of Assam where allowed

to wear muga silks. The golden hue increases with time and washing. Muga

silk is naturally stain-resistant and is never bleached or dyed. Muga silk

fabric is naturally organic and untouched by chemicals, but it is not a

" peace " or " vegetarian " silk because the silkworm is killed before it can

emerge from the cocoon. Like cotton and silk, fashion is a blending of

compromises.

 

Eri (from the domesticated silkworm *Philosamia rinini*) is a fine silk that

is almost as white in color as the Bombyx mori silks. Even though Eri is

spun from the cocoons of domesticated silkworms, it is a " peace silk "

because the Antherea assamensis silk caterpillars are not destroyed in the

cocoon but are allowed to emerge as moths and live a full lifecycle.

Because the Eri silk fibers are more uneven and the cocoons are damaged when

the moth emerges, Eri silk is spun rather than reeled. Eri silk has the look

of wool mixed with cotton but the feel and softness of silk. Muga and Eri

silks are from silkworms that are only found in the Indian state of Assam.

 

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ohandloomlogo.jpg>

Indigo

Handloom <http://www.indigohandloom.com/>, a small eco-fashion company

bursting with energy and creativity, is developing a bridge between the

ancient handlooming cottage industry found throughout rural India and

contemporary modern Western cultures. With eco-design and sales offices in

NYC, Indigo Handloom works closely with a small, select community of

handloom artisans in India to create scarves of the most exquisite quality

and design. They offer a number of timelessly beautiful Muga and Eri silk

scarves that were crafted on ancient handlooms, many sitting outside small

cottages where the artisan weavers can be near their young children.

 

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oom1.jpg>

The

handloom industry in India employs 6,500,000 people and makes 23% of total

cloth produced in India. Handlooming forms an important part of the rich

cultural heritage of India and the skilled craftsmen weave the rich cultural

heritage of India into garments of astounding beauty, complexity and

simplicity – unifying opposites as only the harmonizing tradition of India

can. Handlooming in India is a critical component of sustainable development

in poor, rural regions. Handlooms are environmentally friendly with no

external energy requirements so the energy impact is near zero, but the

handloom industry is endangered by WTO policies that favor the large,

globalized, powerloom textile companies. Companies such as Indigo Handloom,

under the vision of Smita Paul <http://www.smitapaul.com/>, are providing

these local weavers with a venue for bringing their exquisite, eco-friendly

fashions to Western markets.

 

*Is silk organic, sustainable, ethical, healthy?* The quick answer is that

silk can be but the consumer must be aware and ask the right questions when

shopping. Silk, like other protein fibers coming from living beings such as

sheep and alpacas, can easily be created according to organic guidelines as

they begin to be approved. And many silk fibers are probably already being

produced in an organic environment, especially those produced in smaller

villages and rural environments. To boost productions and improve

efficiencies, large corporate farms will typically use heavy chemicals.

 

In the same way, the raising of domesticated silkworms and the life of wild

silkworms is, by nature, sustainable. Silk fabric when produced by weavers

on handlooms has a near zero energy footprint and satisfies most of

the guidelines

for sustainable fabric

production<http://organicclothing.blogs.com/my_weblog/2006/05/sustainable_clo.ht\

ml>.

Silk produced in large powerloomed textiles factories must be evaluated on a

company-by-company basis to determine their sustainability.

 

*Ethical silk. *Evaluating the ethics of silk is always a more complex and

more personal question. Animal rights organizations are concerned about the

destruction of several thousand domesticated silkworms to produce one pound

of silk. Labor rights and Fair Trade organizations are concerned about the

exploitive low wages often paid to silk textile workers.

 

*Healthy Silk.* While being a comparatively healthy and organic natural

fiber, silk, like other fibers containing protein chains such as wools and

even latex, is an allergen for some people. Silk allergies can cause asthma

or allergic rhinitis with symptoms of runny nose and itchy eyes that are

similar to hay fever. Medical researchers have found a wide variety of

causes for a small number of people experiencing silk allergies: some are

allergic to wild silk, some to domesticated silk, and some to micro-fine

dust that can be given off by spun silk. Often, the allergies are traced to

the diet of the silk worm – such as mulberry or oak leaves – which influence

the protein chains found in the silk strands produced by the silk worm.

 

Some silk allergies come from excessive sericin in silk that has not been

adequately degummed. Sericin is a complex protein produced by the silkworm

that is sticky and coats the outside of the silk strand over the fibroin

protein core. During the processing of the silk cocoon strands into silk

threads, the silk workers use boiling hot soapy water that is slightly

alkaline to degum the silk strands by dissolving much of the outer sericin

layer. The waste silk, also called silk noil, from damaged cocoons and

broken strands is often used as filling in silk duvets and lower quality

spun silk fabrics. Sometimes the waste silk / silk noil is not sufficiently

degummed resulting in excess sericin in the products that can result in silk

allergic reactions for some people.

 

This process of degumming is also called scouring and is the first step in

preparing silk for dyeing. Scouring and removing the sericin coating allows

dyes to more easily penetrate the silk fibers. After scouring, silk is often

bleached – sometimes with sulfur fumes to remove blemishes and leave the

silk a uniform creamy color in preparation for dyeing.

 

*Dyed Silk.* As with any fabric, the dyeing of silk can also create health

problems for people with chemical sensitivities and MCS. Because silk fibers

are highly absorptive, Bombyx mori silk takes dyes exceptionally well and is

one reason for the brilliance and luster of dyed silk fabrics. Domesticated

silk fabrics are typically dyed with a mild acid dye or environmentally low

impact fiber reactive dyes. Textile acid dye processes typically require

high levels of chemicals, many of which have been classified by the

Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) as being of moderate to high concern

as carcinogens. Textile acid dyeing also typically discharges large amounts

of contaminated waste waters that require treatment. Low impact fiber

reactive dyes have a much smaller environmental footprint but still create

some health problems for the chemically sensitive.

 

Wild silks and spun silks are harder to clean and bleach before dyeing and

dyes do not take as well requiring heavier dyeing and more chemical

processing before dyeing. If you wish to avoid dyes, your options are raw

silk, natural undyed silk or golden hued Muga silk.

 

*Weighted Silk.* " Weighting " is a textile manufacturing practice peculiar to

and particular to silk manufacturing and involves the application of

metallic salts to add body, luster and physical weight to silk fabric. The

reason for adding metals to silk fabric is to increase the weight of the

fabric and, because silk fabric sells by the pound, the extra weight

increases the selling price of the fabric. Generally, only the finer and

more expensive reeled silks are weighted rather than the less costly spun

silks. Some of the different salts of metals used to weight silk include

chromium, barium, lead, tin, iron and sodium magnesium.

 

Weighting can increase the weight of a pound of raw silk by three, four,

fivefold or more. Silk can be weighted because it is highly absorptive and

the metal salts are easily absorbed into the silk fibers. Silk was

originally weighted to make up for the loss of weight caused by degumming

which removes the sericin reducing the weight of silk by about 20 percent.

Silk is one of the strongest natural fibers but the metals used to weight

silk cause it to lose much of its strength and durability if the weighting

is not done properly. When shopping for silk, ask if the silk is weighted

silk or pure-dyed silk. Pure-dyed silk is just colored with dye and not

weighted. The metallic salts used to weight silk can cause health risks and

problems for some people.

 

*Finishing Silk.* The purpose of the fabric finishing process is to give the

fabric its final desired feel, appearance and care properties. A variety of

environmental and health hazards can be introduced during the finishing

phase of silk fabrics and garments. Water-soluble substances such as starch,

glue, gelatin and even sugar are sometimes used to finish silk and provide

extra body to the fabric.

 

<http://organicclothing.blogs.com/.shared/image.html?/photos/uncategorized/tri.g\

if>

Silk

creases and wrinkles easily, especially when damp or wet. Some silk clothing

manufacturers apply softeners, elastomers, and synthetic resins such as

EPSIA – a silicone-containing epoxy crosslinking agent – to increase the dry

and wet anti-wrinkling and crease-resistance performance of silk garments.

With the family of silicone epoxy crosslinking agents (EPSIA, EPSIB and

EPTA) this crease resistance occurs because chemical cross links occur

between the silk fibroin strand and the epoxy groups. Research by Zaisheng

Cai and Yiping Qiu in the Textile Research

Journal<http://www.triprinceton.org/>(January 2003) reported " in

conventional epoxide finishing of silk, organic

solvents have to be used, which may be hazardous to the health of the

exposed workers as well as the environment. "

 

Chemical treatments are also added to silk to improve anti-static, water and

oil repellency, flame retardant, dimensional stability and other

wash-and-wear properties that our easy-care culture seems to expect. Textile

chemicals have become an integral and important component of conventional

textile and clothing manufacturing. Textile chemicals, also know as textile

auxiliaries, have two primary purposes: to increase the efficiency and lower

the costs of conventional textile manufacturing; and to create special

finishing effects and properties for the clothing.

 

The first category of textile auxiliaries and chemicals to improve

manufacturing efficiencies are used in the spinning, weaving, scouring,

bleaching and dyeing processes. Textile manufacturers claim that these

textile chemicals can all be washed and removed from the final garments and

are used to save time, reduce labor costs and reduce material costs.

Environmental impact is seldom considered, especially in garment factories

in developing countries, and many of the chemicals are discharged as

untreated waste waters into rivers and ground water supplies.

 

The second category of textile chemicals are used mostly in the fabric and

garment finishing processes and are intended to be permanent. These textile

auxiliaries are supposed to give clothing special properties such as a

smooth silky feel, easy care, mildew resiliency, flame retardant, and easy

wear. Many of these chemicals are also toxic and suspected carcinogens.

 

*<http://organicclothing.blogs.com/.shared/image.html?/photos/uncategorized/broo\

ksbrosblouse.jpg>

So

what's the silk consumer to do?* Caveat Emptor – Latin for " Let the buyer

beware " - should be your guiding principal for evaluating all fabrics and

clothing. Knowledge and information are your only resources when every

emotional fiber screams out " I must have that Silk Chiffon Tie Neck

Blouse<http://www.brooksbrothers.com/IWCatProductPage.process?Merchant_Id=1 & Sect\

ion_Id=528 & Product_Id=1140396 & Parent_Id=242>($198)

from Brooks Brothers! " The warp and weft of silk fashion is emotion

and compromise.

 

If your primary concern is healthy and organic silk then consider raw silk,

noil silk, Muga silks or Eri silks that are undyed or dyed with low-impact,

fiber-reactive dyes. The silk fabric should not be weighted or have any easy

care or protective finishes. Silks produced in small villages by local

weavers are usually the most pure.

 

If you are concerned about the ethics of silk raising then choose wild silk,

spun silk or Eri silks which do not destroy the silk worm to harvest the

silk cocoons. Also ask if the silk garments were produced according to Fair

Trade principles which protect the workers involved in all phases of

producing the clothing.

 

If you are concerned about sustainable and eco-friendly silk, then seek

silks dyed using low-impact and fiber reactive dyes or vegetable dyes

without any finishes. Handloomed silks are the most energy-neutral. Silk is

also biodegradable and will decompose gracefully in landfills. Although,

given its durability, silk is ideal for recycled

ecofashion<http://organicclothing.blogs.com/my_weblog/2005/12/recycling_urban.ht\

ml>.

NGO's and organizations such as the Institute for the Conservation of

Tropical Environments

<http://icte.bio.sunysb.edu/pages/silk_project.htm>are developing

programs to assist poor rural communities in conservation

efforts and economic development by developing their wild silk industries.

 

Good Luck and Enjoy.

 

Michael

 

 

 

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