Tussore

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Tussore (also tussah or tussur) is the silk woven from the cocoons of wild silkworms feeding on some mountain shrub. The undyed silk is a tan or light brown colour.[1][2]

There are various types of tussore, each named after the shrub that the cocoons were collected from. The diet of the silkworms has a great effect on the quality of the silk. Collectively, they can be called wild silkworm cloth. Some of the types are listed in the table below,[2]

Shrub Chinese name
mountain pepper jiao
cedrala odorata xiangchun
ailantus glandulosa shu
wild mulberry zhe
oak-shrub zuo
quercus dentata hu


[edit] References

  1. ^ Thompson, p.143.
  2. ^ a b Jing and Luo, p.66.

[edit] Bibliography

  • Eliza Thompson, Silk, Read Books, 2010 ISBN 1408695081
  • Su Jing, Lun Luo, Landlord and labor in late imperial China: case studies from Shandong, Harvard University Asia Center, 1978 ISBN 0674508661.
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