Saturday, September 20, 2014
Thursday, September 18, 2014
Tuesday, September 16, 2014
Sunday, September 7, 2014
Exhibit
SYMPOSIUM September 28-29, 2014. Wuzhen, Tongxiang city, Zhejiang Province, China
FROM LAUSANNE TO BEIJING 8th INTERNATIONAL FIBER ART BIENNALE & INTERNATIONAL FIBER ART SYMPOSIUM
Airport
Arrive to Shanghai Pudong International Airport
There will be vans and cars available to take you to Wuzhen. Arrive to Shanghai Pudong International Airport http://www.shairport.com
Please inform the organizers about the time of your arrival . YOU WILL NEVER FEEL LOST.
If you arrive before September 27, you can take the metro and in one hour you will be at the center of Shanghai.
take a day trip to the city by the metro.
Motel 168 is inside the airport next to the metro
Sept. 26 2014 it will cost$ 60
EXHIBITION
September 30—December 16, 2014.
From Lausanne to Beijing 8th International Fiber Art Biennale
1895 creative cultural industry park, Nantong,China
THE OPENNING CEREMONY
3:00Pm,September 30,2014
1895 creative cultural industry park, Nantong,China
3:00Pm,September 30,2014
1895 creative cultural industry park, Nantong,China
Saturday, September 6, 2014
Silk
Wuzhen is a historic scenic town, part of Tongxiang, located in northern Zhejiang Province, People's Republic of China. Tongxiang is a cultural city with silk production.
Yida Silk Workshop
Renowned as “the land of silk,” Wuzhen is one of China’s most famous centers of silk production.
Founded in 1875, Yida Silk Workshop has experienced many ups and downs in the past one and a half centuries. Today’s Yida has developed into a vertically integrated business, owning the entire silk production process, from planting mulberry trees, to raising silk worms, to silk reeling, to silk spinning and finally silk weaving.
In 1923, the second generation ownership at Yida invented the brocade weaving machine, known as the Dahualuo Machine, with more than 2,000 components and able to complete more than 100 processes.
From pattern making to finished product, it took more than 100 days to finish a piece of brocade on the machine. As the weaving process was highly complicated, and completely dependent on manual labor, daily output was limited to 5 or 6 centimeters. That is why the saying “an inch of brocade is worth an inch of gold” came into being. Both durable and elegant, the brocade produced in Wuzhen combines traditional Chinese weaving techniques with the local brocade weaving technology. The result is “Wuzhen Brocade”, the emperor’s silk.
The production area of Yida demonstrates the complete process of silk manufacturing, from planting mulberry trees, to collecting cocoons, to peeling and weaving. Here visitors can view decades-old mulberry trees growing along the river, watch silk worms growing and spinning their cocoons, try reeling silk themselves on antique machinery, and appreciate some of the beautiful finished silk works on display (some are even considered national treasures). Right here in Wuzhen one stands in front of the long history of Chinese silk culture.
Indigo Fabric Shop
The technique used to make indigo in Wuzhen dates back to the 13th century. This shop still preserves the traditional layout of workshops in that period with the dyehouse in back and shop in front, being both a manufacturer and a retailer. The materials used in making indigo fabric are environmentally-friendly cotton, soybean-based sizing and natural dye from bluegrass. The production process is carried out all by hand. Major indigo products include clothes, kerchiefs, coasters, fans, tablecloths, umbrellas, cell phone bags, wallets, backpacks and various ornaments. All objects have distinctive local folk flavor.
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