s. The outstanding feature of this unique folk wisdom is that the hand-woven fabric is hard to find and comes at a rather high price because the hand-woven fabric relies on skills, detail and craftsmanship with the use of the expert knowledge of manual loom weavers. And silk weaving still results in a cooperative work process in families, including people in the community. The weaving and instruments which are an affirmation of the wisdom of our ancestors. Preservation of hand-woven fabric is, therefore, something that should be maintained. The hand loom silk weaving process begins with raising silkworms at home, procuring silk thread, dying the thread, spinning, reeling, warping, setting the heddles, threading the heddles, designing patterns such as brocade, bullion stitch, bow tie, checkered, plaid patterns. The silk thread is then woven. In Taku, silk is woven for personal use in families and sold as supplemental income for people in the community. Some silk weaving groups have introduced automated textile weaving machines for silk weaving to increase silk weaving capacity. These machines offered convenience and speed in addition to cutting costs. As a result, production is able to meet consumer and market demands while people in these communities earn additional income.
s. The outstanding feature of this unique folk wisdom is that the hand-woven fabric is hard to find and comes at a rather high price because the hand-woven fabric relies on skills, detail and craftsmanship with the use of the expert knowledge of manual loom weavers. And silk weaving still results in a cooperative work process in families, including people in the community. The weaving and instruments which are an affirmation of the wisdom of our ancestors. Preservation of hand-woven fabric is, therefore, something that should be maintained. The hand loom silk weaving process begins with raising silkworms at home, procuring silk thread, dying the thread, spinning, reeling, warping, setting the heddles, threading the heddles, designing patterns such as brocade, bullion stitch, bow tie, checkered, plaid patterns. The silk thread is then woven. In Taku, silk is woven for personal use in families and sold as supplemental income for people in the community. Some silk weaving groups have introduced automated textile weaving machines for silk weaving to increase silk weaving capacity. These machines offered convenience and speed in addition to cutting costs. As a result, production is able to meet consumer and market demands while people in these communities earn additional income.
การแปล กรุณารอสักครู่..
