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SILK From Moth to

SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

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Page 1: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

SILK

From Moth to Cloth

Page 2: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

The Legend

Page 3: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

The Legend

• Xi-Ling-ShiXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

Page 4: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

The Legend

• Xi-Ling-ShiXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

• 2672 B.C. – Neolithic, or New Stone Age, 2672 B.C. – Neolithic, or New Stone Age, nearly nearly five thousand yearsfive thousand years ago ago

Page 5: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

The Legend

• Xi-Ling-ShiXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

• 2672 B.C. – Neolithic, or New Stone Age, 2672 B.C. – Neolithic, or New Stone Age, nearly nearly five thousand yearsfive thousand years ago ago

• Cocoon dropped into tea cupCocoon dropped into tea cup

Page 6: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

Simple Silkworm FactsSimple Silkworm Facts

Page 7: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

Simple Silkworm Facts

• Silk comes from silkworms, which are larvae of the silk moth, Bombyx mori.

Page 8: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

Simple Silkworm Facts

• Silk comes from silkworms, which are larvae of the silk moth, Bombyx mori.

• Each caterpillar spins a single cocoon – it can be up to 1500 meters of unbroken thread – nearly a mile!

Page 9: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

Simple Silkworm Facts

• Silk comes from silkworms, which are larvae of the silk moth, Bombyx mori.

• Each caterpillar spins a single cocoon – it can be up to 1500 meters of unbroken thread – nearly a mile!

• The caterpillars only eat mulberry leaves, and they eat so much they increase their body weight by up to10,000 times over four weeks.

Page 10: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

Silkworms hatch from tiny eggs the size of poppy seeds.

Page 11: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

This little guy is only a few hours old.

Page 12: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

They eat a LOT of leaves.

Page 13: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor
Page 14: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor
Page 15: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor
Page 16: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor
Page 17: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

They eat a LOT of leaves.

Page 18: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor
Page 19: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

By the time they’re ready to spin cocoons, they will be as big as an adult’s finger.

Page 20: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

The caterpillar starts to spin by putting down a silk web.

Page 21: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

The caterpillar will spin for three days, until the cocoon is very solid.

Page 22: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

The caterpillar will spin for three days, until the cocoon is very solid.

Page 23: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

The caterpillar will spin for three days, until the cocoon is very solid.

Page 24: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

Inside the cocoon, the caterpillar changes its skin and becomes a pupa.

Page 25: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

After about three weeks, the pupa will turn into a moth, and hatch from the cocoon.

Page 26: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

After about three weeks, the pupa will turn into a moth, and hatch from the cocoon.

First, the moth squirts an enzyme on the silk to soften it.

Page 27: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

After about three weeks, the pupa will turn into a moth, and hatch from the cocoon.

Then, the moth digs its way out through the silk.

Page 28: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

After about three weeks, the pupa will turn into a moth, and hatch from the cocoon.

Its wings are soft and limp.

Page 29: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

Even when their wings are dry, domesticated silkmoths cannot fly.

This is a male moth.

Page 30: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

This is a female moth. She will lay 200 - 500 eggs.

Page 31: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

The moths have no mouths, and they cannot eat or drink. They live usually four or five

days.

Page 32: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

If the moth hatches, it breaks the cocoon into many short pieces of silk. To turn

cocoons into silk thread, they are stifled, or baked, to kill and dry the pupa.

Page 33: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

Silk Reeling

Page 34: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

Silk Reeling

• Each silk cocoon is a single thread – but it is as fine as a spider web.

Page 35: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

Silk Reeling

• Each silk cocoon is a single thread – but it is as fine as a spider web.

• The threads from several cocoons are wound together – this is called reeling.

Page 36: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

Silk Reeling

• Each silk cocoon is a single thread – but it is as fine as a spider web.

• The threads from several cocoons are wound together – this is called reeling.

• A set of pulleys, called a croissure, helps to strengthen the thread.

Page 37: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

Silk Reeling

• Each silk cocoon is a single thread – but it is as fine as a spider web.

• The threads from several cocoons are wound together – this is called reeling.

• A set of pulleys, called a croissure, helps to strengthen the thread.

• Twenty cocoons makes a strand as fine as a hair.

Page 38: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

Silk Reeling

A brush helps to find the ends of the cocoons.

Page 39: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

Silk Reeling

At first, there is a tangled mess.

Page 40: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

Silk Reeling

But after a while, there is one end for each cocoon.

Page 41: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

Silk Reeling

This is the croissure - a set of pulleys

that squeezes the thread to help

make it strong and remove moisture.

Page 42: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

Silk ReelingThis is a silk reel - it winds the silk from the

cocoons.

Page 43: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

Dyeing

Page 44: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

Dyeing

Dyes make silk different colors.

Page 45: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

Dyeing

First, the white yarn is soaked in water.

Page 46: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

Dyeing

The dye liquid looks like kool-aid.

Page 47: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

Dyeing

The silk is dipped until it soaks up the color.

Page 48: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

Dyeing

After they dry, the threads are ready to use.

Page 49: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

Things I make with silk

I like to weave with silk.

Page 50: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

Things I make with silk

I make ribbons for prizes and awards.

Page 51: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

Things I make with silk

And fancy silk bookmarks.

Page 52: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

Things I make with silk

And fancy silk bookmarks.

Page 53: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

Things I make with silk

I like to embroider with silk, too.

Page 54: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

Things I make with silk

Light shines beautifully on the silk threads.

Page 55: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

Some Silk Facts

Page 56: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

Some Silk Facts

• Silk can hold up to 30% of its weight in water before it feels damp.

Page 57: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

Some Silk Facts

• Silk can hold up to 30% of its weight in water before it feels damp.

• Silk is an excellent electrical insulator.

Page 58: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

Some Silk Facts

• Silk can hold up to 30% of its weight in water before it feels damp.

• Silk is an excellent electrical insulator.

• Silk is stronger per weight than steel wire.

Page 59: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

Some Silk Facts

• Silk can hold up to 30% of its weight in water before it feels damp.

• Silk is an excellent electrical insulator.

• Silk is stronger per weight than steel wire.

• Silk can be made into a wide range of fabrics - everything from bridal veils to bullet-proof vests.

Page 60: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

Some Silk Facts

• Silk can hold up to 30% of its weight in water before it feels damp.

• Silk is an excellent electrical insulator.

• Silk is stronger per weight than steel wire.

• Silk can be made into a wide range of fabrics - everything from bridal veils to bullet-proof vests.

• Silk can be used for sutures - threads to stitch closed wounds and incisions.

Page 61: SILK From Moth to Cloth. The Legend Xi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow EmperorXi-Ling-Shi, Wife of the Yellow Emperor

Some Silk Facts

• Silk can hold up to 30% of its weight in water before it feels damp.

• Silk is an excellent electrical insulator.

• Silk is stronger per weight than steel wire.

• Silk can be made into a wide range of fabrics - everything from bridal veils to bullet-proof vests.

• Silk can be used for sutures - threads to stitch closed wounds and incisions.