Silk torsades used for weaving in Silk worm museum, Musée de la soie, Saint Hippolyte du Fort, Gard, France
The mountainous Cevennes region of southern France was one of the most important silk-producing areas in Europe in the nineteenth century. The mulberry tree flourishes in the Cevennes, and silk was produced on a domestic process from the thirteenth century, but about 1810 the ‘Gensoul’ proce was introduced, using batteries of earthenware or metal pans to boil the silkworm larvae before winding off the silk thread, which stimulated the concentration of production in factories, something that was accelerated by the introduction of steam power about 1840. Some silk was used to make hosiery, but much of what was produced in the Cevennes was despatched for further processing to throwing mills in the Ardeche. Silk production ceased in the 1960s, but some 150 mill buildings, large and small, remain in the region. The industry is commemorated in the museum at Saint Hippolyte du Fort, a small town on the River Vidourie, which provided power for throwing mills. The museum portrays all the processes involved in the manufacture of silk fabrics, and its exhibits include looms and clothing, as well as items relating to the initial stages of production in which the region specialised. Cocoons may be tough or soft, opaque or translucent, of various colors, or composed of multiple layers, depending on the type of insect larva producing it. Many moth caterpillars spin their cocoon in a concealed location—on the underside of a leaf. The silk in the cocoon of the silk moth can be unraveled to harvest silk fibre which makes this moth the most economically important of all lepidopterans. The silk moth is the only completely domesticated lepidopteran; it does not exist in the wild.
Size: 4512px × 3008px
Location: Saint Hippolyte du Fort, Gard France
Photo credit: © Daniel Valla FRPS / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No
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