How Silk is Made
Cultivation is a difficult process that begins with the silk moth. The moth lays hundreds of eggs about the size of a pinhead that are examined and discarded if they are diseased. The eggs are then put in cold storage for six to ten months until the mulberry trees bud.
After incubation, the eggs hatch into larvae. For about a month these larvae live in a carefully controlled environment eating mulberry leaves. They grow quickly and become caterpillars called silkworms. The silkworm is very particular about its environment. If conditions are not ideal, the silkworm produces inferior silk or no silk at all.
The silkworm then starts to spin a cocoon for itself to protect it while it transforms into a moth. A single cocoon yields 1,600 – 5,300 feet of continuous filament. It is this length of fiber that makes silk fabric unlike any other type of fiber.