Silkworms, which were introduced in " Tree of Tranquility ", produce silk cocoons, that can be shipped as is, or turned into silk yarn.
12.
Transformation of a hank of lavender silk yarn ( top ) into a ball in which the yarn emerges from the center ( bottom ).
13.
Transformation of a hank of lavender silk yarn ( top ) into a ball in which the knitting yarn emerges from the center ( bottom ).
14.
If you sport a silk scarf with a " Made in Italy " label, chances are that not only was its silk yarn spun in China but it was woven into fabric there too.
15.
He had started his work among the silk weavers of Arni, organized them into a Silk weavers co-operative which would help them secure silk yarn and " jari " ( mainly from Surat ).
16.
After 1827 a silk industry grew in the Leigh parish and silk fabrics were woven on domestic hand looms and in weaving sheds using silk yarn supplied from Macclesfield or Leek by agents from Manchester.
17.
Linen, plain weave; embroidered with silk yarns and gilt-metal-strip-wrapped silk in Algerian eye, back, buttonhole, open buttonhole filling, chain, double running, overcast, plaited braid, and square open work stitches; laid work, couching and woven wheels; spangles
18.
Two eri spun-silk mills have been established in Hindupur in Andhra Pradesh and Kokrajhar in Assam while another is at Chaygaon, near Guwahati, Assam, which is spinning the finest Eri spun-silk yarn with various blends with bamboo, muga silk, cotton etc.
19.
These double-woven fabrics had separate warps of wool and silk yarn and were woven by Alexander Morton & Co . of Darvel, Scotland, who would later weave similar fabrics from designs by C . F . A . Voysey and others.
20.
Raw Silk yarn was initially imported from China, and the timing and place of the first weaving of it in the Near Eastern world is a matter of controversy, with Egypt, Persia, Syria and Constantinople all being proposed, for dates in the 4th and 5th centuries.