With silk, however, especially if you buy skeins of it from SCA merchants, there are additional steps involved that make the project more labor intensive. Whereas cotton embroidery floss is usually six-ply, the silk skeins are one or two ply. The silk must be separated from its skein, and then pieced off into the six-ply strands needed to embroider.
I chose to do several 18-20inch long cuts of thread, as that's the length of the strand I work with while embroidering. I set it up either between my toes (which is incredibly uncomfortable) or on my loom:
Then wrap them onto a plastic embroidery card:
The process can take a few hours, especially when you figure in how tangled silk can get. That's just for the set-up! Once you get to working on the embroidery itself, it's a massive undertaking.
In this case, I only purchased nine skeins, and that was back in September. Those nine skeins of silk will probably finish off the panel pictured (and a little more besides), so I'll need nine more to accomplish the project I want.
Thank goodness I don't have to process the silk myself, right? ;)
- Ciosa