Intertextile Shanghai 2026
cinte techtextil 2026
itma 2027

Silk spinning in Iran ; 3000-year-old art still practiced

Silk spinning in Iran – There are silk makers in different parts of Iran, mainly in northern Gilan and northeastern Khorasan Razavi provinces, that still practice the trade their ancestors did some 3,000 years ago. For more than three millennia, silk thread produced in Iran has been used to make clothing fabric and for weaving Persian rugs.

Silk Production Along the Iran-Afghanistan Border

In many of these small villages along the Iran-Afghanistan border, families receive the cocoons of live silkworms in wooden boxes from wealthy silk traders who also pay their salaries. The cocoons are then soaked in hot water, which loosens the filaments so that the raw silk threads may be extracted, the Middle East Eye said in an article on Thursday.

The Silk Road was a well-connected network of routes which, according to ancient maps, began in China and passed through central Asia before ending in Syria. It served as an important trade route connecting the Mediterranean Sea and China.

silk spinning in Iran

Bask Village: 110 Families in Sericulture

It was from his father that 47-year-old Gholamreza Mohammadi learnt how to unravel silk filaments from silk cocoons. Every day, Mohammadi spends between four and five hours reeling silk in the dark and damp workshop at the end of his courtyard.

Like Mohammadi, all 110 families in the small village of Bask, around 1,000 kilometres northeast of the capital Tehran, make a living producing silk thread.

Silk cocoons are produced in the northern provinces of Iran. They are also imported from Afghanistan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan for around 2m Iranian rials (roughly $17) per kilo. But villagers like Naghizadeh do not have the financial means to buy or import the cocoons themselves, so they rely on silk traders for the supply.

In the past, silk threads would be wound round the spindles by hand. Today, this process is powered by electric machinery, but most of the rest of the process is still done manually. While there are industrial silk factories in Iran, at smaller workshops like Mohammadi’s, little has changed in the traditional craft for hundreds of years.

silk spinning in Iran

“It’s a difficult job,” says 50-year-old Asghar Naghizaded, who has been producing silk threads since he was 13, when he was still in high school. It is a profession these villagers have dedicated their whole lives to. “But the main benefit of that goes in the pockets of the masters [silk traders]; we are just the labourers,” Naghizaded says.

And it is indeed a long-winded process. According to another silk producer in Bask, Hojjat Amini, an entire family of four people or more might work for 12 hours straight to produce one kilogram of silk thread.

Each member of the family plays a role in the process. Nine-year-old Shir-mohammad helps his mother with the final stage of the silk thread production, where several threads are gathered together to form bundles.

silk spinning in Iran

The process involves minimal waste – even the silkworms are dried and used as fish food. The traders allow the villagers to dry and sell the silkworms as they please.

These bundles of finished silk thread, held in Mohammadi’s wife’s hands, are the product of around a week’s work. Every month, the silk traders come to the village and collect the silk threads which are now ready to be steam dyed.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

spot_img
spot_img
spot_img
spot_img
spot_img
spot_img
spot_img
AMEC AMETEX
spot_img
spot_img
spot_img
spot_img

Related News

Inside Iran’s Underwear Industry: Market Growth, Manufacturers and Textile Innovation

An Editorial by Kohan Textile Journal Introduction: A Strategic Yet...

Iran’s Post-War Outlook: Path to Recovery or Prolonged Crisis?

An Editorial Analysis by Kohan Textile Journal A Fragile Starting...

How Middle East War Could Reshape Global Supply Chains and Iran’s Textile Trade

War changes more than borders and headlines. It alters...

Isfahan’s Textile Industry at a Crossroads: Tradition, Challenges, and the Urgent Call for Modernization

Editorial – Kohan Textile Journal Isfahan, long recognized as the...

Why Iran Struggles to Succeed in Synthetic Fiber Production Despite Abundant Petrochemical Resources

Kohan Textile Journal – Editorial Analysis Iran’s petrochemical industry possesses...

Persian Carpets Price: The Luxury Behind the Cost

Persian carpets, also known as Iranian carpets, are renowned...

Zhuhai Manufacturer Expands Global Reach with Advanced Textile Printing Solutions

Specializing in Digital and Sublimation Printing Technologies A leading manufacturing...

Iran’s Agrofood Exports to EAEU Surge, Led by Russia

Rouhollah Latifi, a senior official with the Central Organization...

Uzbekistan Aims to Enhance Tech Cooperation with Iran, Eyes $1 Billion Investment in 2024: Ambassador

Uzbekistan's ambassador to Iran revealed on Thursday plans to...

General Survey of Iran Carpet Weaving Industries

History of first Iranian carpet weaving factory establishment Carpet production...

Iranian Companies Holding OEKO-TEX® Certification

In response to the growing consumer desire for responsible...

Amirkabir University of Technology Ranks 10th Globally in Textile Science and Engineering

In 2023, Amirkabir University of Technology in Iran was...