The Art Of Making A Silk Orchid Flower
Feeding and fertilization are also key elements to keeping your cattleya’s in perfect shape.
The Art of Making a Silk Orchid Flower
Silk was first developed in China, where silkworms and mulberry trees lived naturally. To produce silk fabric, weavers must collect silkworm larvae, and first spin it, as almost any other natural fiber, then weave the fine threads.
Hand-Made Silk Flowers
This fine fabric, perhaps first woven 8,000 years ago, was originally reserved for the Chinese Imperial family. Just as they developed the first silk garments, they developed the first silk flowers. A ladys elegant costume might include a silk orchid flower, or some other type of bloom, tucked into her hair.
As knowledge of silk cultivation spread west, so did the art of making artificial flowers. By the 1100s, Italians were making these flowers, and they probably produced a silk orchid flower, among many other varieties.
Machine-Made Silk Flowers
Until this point, artificial flowers, like almost everything else, had been hand-made. But as Europe experienced the industrial revolution, they invented machines to help make more life-like silk plants.
The Powerhouse Museum of Sydney, Australia displays an excellent late-Victorian machine used to make artificial flowers. This little machine looks something like a small die press, but in fact, it was the culmination of Victorian flower-making technology.
A flower-maker would use dies in this press to cut flower petals out of silk or other fabric. He would have had many sets of dies to produce different species of flowers. Though a silk orchid flower may have only five or six petals, the next step, shaping the blossom, would take some patience.
Silk flower petals were then joined together using glue and wires. Then each petal was shaped with a warm soldiering iron and molds that fit the curvature of various flowers. The final step was dyeing and painting, which on some species of silk orchid flower, must have taken hours on each petal.
Today, artificial flowers usually do not contain any actual silk, unless they are very fine pieces of art. Other materials, like polyester, muslin, and satin are much easier and cheaper to work with. However, in a nod to the old art of artificial flower making, most blossoms are still referred to as silk flowers.
What was once exclusive, available only to the richest members of society, is now every where. Not only in arrangements, but also a silk orchid flower might make a nice, everlasting Mothers Day corsage or a decoration on a wedding dress.
Plum blossoms and bamboo were other popular subjects.
International tree garden grows at Buckfield home (The Lewiston Sun Journal) BUCKFIELD - David Ledlie is a quiet man with a real passion for fishing. This interest has carried him all over the world and through the years he has accomplished much more than just catching fish. Not just for farmers (The Beacon News) Don't be surprised if you hear "merci beaucoup" at Geneva's French Market. Take Dad to see 1,000 orchids (Asheville Citizen-Times) ASHEVILLE -- Eight gardens and three inns will open to visitors this Father's Day during Quality Forward's annual garden tour. This year's ramble ranges between the Chestnut Hill and Grove Park neighborhoods just north of downtown. Doing big business in orchids (Hernando Today) There is never a wrong time of the year to purchase flowers for those you love. Thats the sentiment of Everlast Orchids and Supplies. Pair hope success will keep growing (Bury Free Press) BEAUTIFUL blooms are blossoming at Tudor Rose Florist, in Bury St Edmunds, which opened last weekend. Springing into action (Chichester Observer) Chichester Conservation Volunteers have sent out an invitation to people to 'Spring into Action' by joining them on one of their Sunday events.
Its name’s origin is from the ancient Sanskrit ‘vanda tessellate’; its beauty and splendor enchant anyone’s eyes and spirits.
All About The Cattleya Orchid
Too much lighting should be avoided to prevent permanent damage to the plant tissues-the sunburn.
The Art Of Making A Silk Orchid Flower
Tree-fern fiber is a good mix for them, provided that the medium lets some air meet the roots.
|