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Full articleProduct code 101-36-0071
A fluid silk fabric in ivory with a lustrous surface, this silk satin drapes in soft, gentle folds and looks great in bias cuts. A wonderful choice for dressy blouses, formalwear, and bridal gowns, as well as lingerie and nightwear.
Read moreShade: | ivory |
Material: | 100% silk |
Width (cm): | 114 cm |
Width (inches): | 45 ″ |
Weight (mm): | 16 mm |
Weight (gsm): | 69 gsm |
Weight (oz): | 2 oz |
Drape: | very supple |
Care: | |
Availability: | seasonal collection |
Minimum order: | 0.2 m |
in stock 22 m
Genuine silk satin is appreciated for its high luster and numbers among the luxury fabrics. Aside from its great looks, it has a lot going for it; it’s soft, comfortable, and breathes well. This substantial satin drapes in soft, gentle folds. It’s a wonderful choice for dressy blouses, formalwear, and bridal gowns, as well as lingerie and nightwear. Take advantage of its drape in bias cut patterns. Use a thin needle and pins and take care when handling; satins have a tendency to snag.
A very similar material, but with a slight crêpe structure on the back, is our crêpe-backed satin. If you are looking for a stiffer satin that holds its shape, try our duchesse satin. If, on the other hand, you’d like something more fluid, try our silk charmeuse or fine crêpe-backed satin. You might also try stretch satin and stretch crêpe satin, which contain elastane, making them more flexible and wrinkle resistant.
Care
We recommend dry cleaning this fabric at a reliable dry cleaner. In our tests of how to wash silk this fabric stood up to gentle hand washing. If you risk hand washing, use lukewarm water and a delicate detergent for woolens; do not wring or squeeze dry; block dry on a flat surface. Dry iron on the back on the lowest setting. Avoid water droplets.
Yes. Silk is our specialty. All fabrics marked as "silk" in our shop are always made of natural silk. You can rely on the fact that is always natural mulberry silk unless we say otherwise. If it is a different type of natural silk (e.g., wild silk), we will say so. We describe the many types of natural silk in full detail in our post on types of silk.
Washing is generally not recommended for silk – it belongs at the dry cleaners. However, as our big silk wash test has shown, some types of silk fabrics can stand up to a gentle wash program or hand washing without harm if you follow the procedure described. That said, wash silk at your own risk. We definitely recommend testing in advance on a small sample of the fabric – because silk is a natural material it's not 100% predictable. Never use an ordinary laundry detergent – use a special detergent for wool and silk or, if there's no other option, a gentle, silicone-free shampoo.
The fabrics in our core inventory, seasonal collections and limited editions are from repeated production cycles that we have quality-tested – given proper care their colors should not bleed. Fabrics that are on offer while supplies last are one-off products that have not been individually tested, so we recommend testing on a sample. Silk may lose some color when washed in water that's too hot or with unsuitable detergent. Always follow the recommended water temperature and use detergents designed for washing silk or wool. Washing silk, though it is often no problem, is always at your own risk. Read more in our post on How to wash silk.
If you are not going to dye the finished garment, we recommend a high-quality polyester thread for sewing silk. If you want to dye the finished garment, be sure to choose a silk thread (polyester does not take dye). The choice of sewing needle and thread depends on the type and weight of the fabric – for sewing particularly fine fabrics (chiffons, georgettees, light satins, light crepes) a thinner polyester or silk thread and a corresponding thin needle are suitable. Do not use cotton thread to sew silk.
Probably the best way to tell is the burn test. Silk burns reluctantly, leaving a black crumb that you can easily crush between your fingers and smells like burnt hair. Be sure to test threads pulled from both the weft and the warp. In addition to the burn test, there are a plenty of other tricks – check out our post on how to tell real silk.
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Full articleIt’s common knowledge that silk is made from the snow-white cocoon of the mulberry silk moth. But how do we go from that tightly spun wad to a perfect, endless thread? The secret of silk production was closely guarded by the Chinese court for millennia and those who would talk faced death. Yet it turns out that all you need if you’d like to see how it works, is a cup of warm water...
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