Faraona

15/3/10

British art historian creates world's largest shawl woven from the silk of one million spiders .

Θα μου πείτε οτι οι καιροί είναι δύσκολοι για τέτοιες πολυτέλειες....
η τέχνη όμως είναι πάντα τέχνη.
Κοιτάξτε τι ίνες δίνουν οι θηλυκές μη δηλητηριώδεις
χρυσές αράχνες σε χρώμα και ποιότητα.


Απο τον ιστό τους έφτιαχναν παλιά τα δίχτυα τους οι ψαράδες
της Μαδαγασκάρης.


1 million spiders, to be exact. Using silk extracted from more than a million golden orb spiders, which are found only in Madagascar, this spectacular 11×4-foot shawl took British art historian Simon Peers and his American business partner Nicholas Godley more than four years to create using century-old weaving techniques. Another remarkable feature: The glistening silk threads are completely undyed.
Now on display at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City, the shawl is believed to be the largest—and rarest—piece of cloth woven entirely from golden spider silk, which is known for both its intense color and strength. Only the females of the species, which isn’t poisonous, produce the silk filaments, 24 of which are twisted by hand into a single strand, then twisted again with three other similar strands to make the silk thread.





The shawl is believed to be the largest—and rarest—piece of cloth woven entirely from golden spider silk.

Roughly 70 people collected spiders daily from webs on telephone wires, then another dozen more drew silk from the spiders using hand-powered machines. Although some spiders died during production, a system was set up so that spiders being used were released every day. “We have become sort of the defenders of these spiders, something we never thought we’d be,” Godley told The New York Times. “They really are very regal-looking creatures.”

The intricately patterned shawl, which features traditional Malagasy bird-and-flower motifs, has its genesis in 19th century stories of a French colonial administrator’s attempts to spin cloth from the threads of golden orb spiders. In the late 1890s, Madagascan fishermen also used spider silk, which for its weight is stronger than steel, to create rudimentary nets and lines.

6 σχόλια:

drosostalitsa είπε...

Υπέροχο & Αρχοντικό!
Πολύ ενδιαφέρουσα ανάρτηση!
Καλό μεσημέρι!

ΕΛΕΝΑ είπε...

Aπίστευτο!!
Πανέμορφο!!
Μια πολυτέλεια που πραγματικά αξίζει!
Φιλιά, καλό απόγευμα!

faraona είπε...

Δροσοσταλιά χαίρομαι που τη βρίσκεις ενδιαφέρουσα.

faraona είπε...

Ελενα
ετσι νομίζω κι εγω.

ellinida είπε...

Εκπληκτικό!

faraona είπε...

Εβινάκι μου
είδες οι αραχνούλες;

:) :0)

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Kαλώς τους!!!

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