I love learning how things are made. That
was what first got me into tailoring, and it has remained a passion over the
years. I was grateful to Nicholas Atgemis of Le Noued Papillon, therefore, for
sending me a PDF he has of the guide to the silk museum in Como. I had visited
the museum a long time ago, but didn’t pick up any literature and had forgotten
most of the information I consumed at the time. Reading the guide brought it
all back.
It never ceases to amaze me that the silk
we have used in everything from handkerchiefs to parachutes comes from the
unwinding of cocoons. Around 1,200 metres of it in each one, densely packed
around a mulberry worm.
It’s perhaps even more amazing that whole
regions of the world spent their time rearing such tiny animals and harvesting
their delicate filament. Women would carry bags of the eggs against their skin,
often between their breasts, to keep them incubated.
Once the cocoon was spun, girls would brush
the surface of the tiny things to bring up the end, and then wind it around a
reel. All in water of 90-100 degrees. It was “exhausting and complex” work that
had to “be done quickly under difficult conditions” as the guide says.
Today, of course, much of this process is
automated. Indeed, the silk worms no longer eat mulberry leaves but a synthetic
feed that means they can be grown all year round. Yet the magical nature of the
product remains. The silk museum, which was created in 1990, is well worth a visit, particularly as it features machines that have been restored to working
condition, rather than just exhibited as relics.
Le Noued Papillon, for those that don’t
know, is a great Australian site for silk bow ties and related paraphernalia. Nicholas
is always seeking ways to set his product apart and the use of block Mogador (cotton
warp, silk weft), intricate jacquard weaves and designs that are limited to
single runs certainly does that. The image below is a close-up of a natte silk,
which few mills produce today. Indeed, few companies even design silks
specifically for bow ties.
Nicholas’s range of shapes is also
unparalleled, with batwings (slim and regular), diamond points (curved and
regular), butterflies, (wide, modified and ones that actually look like a
butterfly) and handlebar-moustache ties (think Salvador Dali). It’s not easy to
stand out in mass online retailing, but this is the way to do it.


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