Nezapomněli jste na něco?

Nákupní košík

Your cart is empty. Let's do something about that :-)

HINT: Browse our new arrivals

At a loss? Check out our blog

Wheeling and dealing… in silk cocoons

The hall explodes in frenzied activity as brokers rush to buy and sell. Deals are struck. Fortunes are made. But we’re not on Wall Street. And it’s not stocks and bonds trading hands… It’s silkworm cocoons. Welcome to the great cocoon market in Karnataka!

Mulberry silkworm cocoons

Opening out before me was a wide hall just bursting with fluffy white and yellow clouds. The space was packed end-to-end with tables supporting bins of cocoons of all sizes and every shade from snow white to buttercup yellow. It was like drowning in a sea of silk. As we waded through the narrow aisles among the mountains of cocoons, I plunged my hands into the white gold and started asking questions.


How does the silk cocoon market work?

Silk cocoon markets, like the one that I visited, are operated directly by the Indian government and are the only places where cocoons can be legally traded in India. Official government involvement guarantees that quality standards are met and provides conditions where the price of the cocoons can be set on the basis of free-market principals of supply and demand. Participants pay a (not prohibitive) fee to take part in the market.

silk cocoons
Each batch of cocoons headed for silk production is labeled with its quality and place of origin

Mulberry silkworm farmers and silk reelers meet at the market seven days a week, 365 days a year. Farmers arrive with their goods early in the morning. Each batch undergoes a thorough inspection. The age of the cocoons is verified – each cocoon must have a live pupa inside in order to be accepted. The type of silkworm is also recorded, as is the quality of the cocoons, estimated silk yield, and estimated market value. Each batch of cocoons is marked with this data, plus the name of the cultivator and the place of origin, which plays a major role in determining the price. The tagged goods are sent to their designated places in the great hall, where buyers can make a hands-on inspection.

Yellow silk cocoon of a hybrid silk moth
The raw silk cocoon of the hybrid silk moth is a yellowish color

There are two types of silk cocoons traded at the market – the well-known snow-white cocoons of the mulberry silkworm of the species bombyx mori, generally considered to produce the best, most expensive silk, and the yellowish cocoons of a different silkworm crossbreed.

In the Indian subcontinent, the breeding process of mulberry silk moths takes place twice a year – meaning that silk cocoons are spun twice annually, each containing about 1,000 m of silk filament. There are also specially bred silk moths that breed six to eight times per year, each cocoon containing 800 m of silk filament. Their cocoons contain a different protein group, which lends them a yellow tint, and they usually fetch lower prices. In terms of quality, however, they are similar to mulberry silk, and once the filament has been reeled it is very difficult to tell the difference.


Making a deal

Buyers walk the halls, occasionally dipping their hands into the mounds of cocoons, stopping for a word here and there with one of the farmers. But when the huge, digital display overhead comes to life, all activity stops and a charge of expectation fills the air. These simple farmers in their threadbare work clothes, some with no shoes on their feet, whip smartphones from their pockets and begin feverishly interacting through a special application. The whole auction is digital.

A view of one of the market halls where cocoons are traded for silk production
Prices for cocoons destined for silk production are set by an open bidding process. Current bids are displayed on digital displays.

Buyers, having gleaned the information they need from their rounds of the floor, begin sending anonymous bids on the batches that caught their eye. Highest offers flash on screens set at intervals on the wall. The numbered codes representing buyers and cocoon batches display alongside each bid. Watching the scene unfold, I was reminded of a typical day at a busy airport, where travelers turn their eyes to the arrivals and departures boards.

The auction closes twice daily, at 10:30 and again at 11:30. If the highest offer is accepted, then the cocoons exchange hands. But that doesn’t always happen – if a farmer thinks the highest offer is still too low, they can refuse it. Everyone concentrates on their mobile phone, endlessly speculating whether to bid, close a deal, or wait for a higher bid. Keeping a cool head in those conditions takes talent and experience. Myself, I got so worried for the sellers as the 11:30 deadline loomed that I had butterflies in my stomach. Of course, they were all far more at ease. ????


Live cocoons only!

The cocoon markets are the only place in India where this raw material for making silk can be legally bought or sold. But there’s something else that’s special about them too… the pupae inside of the cocoons are still alive! That sets them apart from the cocoon markets in China, where cocoons are run through a hot-air stove immediately after harvest, killing the chrysalis and conserving the cocoon so farmers can store them for up to a year.

The fact that the cocoons are sold while the pupae are still alive means that they are very fresh, guaranteeing the buyer quality material. A pupa lives in its cocoon only eight to ten days. The first half of that time they have to be left in optimum conditions on the farm until they have finished spinning their silk. It’s not until then that the cocoons can be dismounted and taken to market. The short lifecycle of the pupa only allows a window of five days for cocoons to be brought to market, sold, transported, and processed into silk thread or at least conserved. If the process were to take longer, the pupa would break out of its cocoon, damaging the “endless” silk filament. The time factor plays a big role in negotiations. As the days pass, the farmers lower their prices in order to sell in time.

A live pupa of the mulberry silk moth
Only cocoons with live pupae inside are allowed on the market for cocoons for silk production.

What’s next for the cocoons?

It’s just past noon. The adrenalin rush has dissipated and the halls are filled with the purposeful shuffle of workers. All deals have been made. Now what remains is getting goods to their new owners to be taken away. The cocoons await their fate – to be made into exquisite silk thread, fine and lustrous… About that, read more in my article about how silk is made – from cocoon to silk thread.


Interesting facts

A single silk cocoon produces up to a kilometer of silk filament

It takes seven kilograms of cocoons to make one kilogram of silk thread

One kilogram of silk thread makes almost eight meters of 114 cm wide silk fabric such as satin or crêpe de chine

So, a kilogram of silk cocoons yields about a meter of silk satin


Indian silk fabrics in stock

Our Indian silks are produced exclusively for Sartor Bohemia without any third party. We directly support small family weavers that we hand select ourselves.

Comments(0)

Get Sartor in your inbox

Subscribe to our newsletter and feed your creativity. You won't get any spam from us, just the sort of interesting and informative content that we'd like to receive ourselves.

By registering you agree to the processing of your personal data

Contact form close
Načíst

Got a question? A dilemma?

(+420) 777 511 114
support@sartorbohemia.com

Language

Currency

Cookies

We use cookies for the proper functioning of this e-commerce shop, to adapt the site content to your needs, for statistical and marketing purposes and to personalize advertisements from Google and other companies. By clicking "Accept All", you consent to their collection and processing, and we will provide you with the best shopping experience.

Your cookies settings

Here you can enable cookies according to your own preferences.You can change those settings any time in the future by clicking 'Cookie settings' link in our website's footer.

Necessary cookies help make a website usable by enabling basic functions like page navigation and access to secure areas of the website. The website cannot function properly without these cookies.

Preference cookies enable a website to remember information that changes the way the website behaves or looks, like your preferred language or the region that you are in.

Statistic cookies help website owners to understand how visitors interact with websites by collecting and reporting information anonymously.

These cookies are used by advertising and social networks, including Google, to transmit personal data and personalise ads to make them interesting to you.