. "Silk bag containing six labelled skeins of silk with a corresponding letter, Bengal, ca. 1817"@en . . . . . . . . . "1817~, Bengal" . . "0.56940001249313354492"^^ . . . . "0.67619997262954711914"^^ . . . . . "Striped silk bag with black fringes containing six labelled filatures (skeins of silk) and a corresponding letter with insert. The letter is dated 1818 and gives instructions for the purchase of raw silk in Bengal. The printed insert dated 1817 gives the current prices for silk purchase by region, quality, and buyer.\n\nFive of the six silk skeins originally had folded paper labels wrapped within them. The labels were removed and flattened in 2015 to reveal the identity of their corresponding skeins."@en . "SILK SKEINS AND COCOONS\n\nSilk is reeled or spun from the filaments of the silkworm\u2019s cocoon and then woven. India\u2019s \u2018wild\u2019 silks come from the larvae of the Antheraea genus of moths, which are native to eastern and central India. Mulberry silk was introduced to India from China about 2000 years ago. Different parts of silk cocoons are used to make different textures of silk yarn.\n\nSilk skeins\n(Top, left to right): eri, tasar (semi-bleached ghicha), mulberry waste (fesua), muga (machine-reeled)\n(Bottom): muga (ghicha), tasar (jhurri), tasar (nassi), tasar (katia)\nAssam, Odisha and Madhya Pradesh, 2014\nV&A: IS.16 to 23-2015\n\nSilk cocoons\n(left to right): Muga silkworm, eri silkworm, mulberry silkworm\nAssam, 2006\nPrivate collection\n\nMulberry silk skeins\nBengal, 1818\nV&A: IS.57-1990 [03/10/2015-10/01/2016]\n [03/10/2015-10/01/2016]"@en . . "0.48699998855590820312"^^ . "Silk bag containing six labelled skeins of silk with a corresponding letter, Bengal, ca. 1817"@en . . . . . "SILK SKEINS AND COCOONS\n\nSilk is reeled or spun from the filaments of the silkworm\u2019s cocoon and then woven. India\u2019s \u2018wild\u2019 silks come from the larvae of the Antheraea genus of moths, which are native to eastern and central India. Mulberry silk was introduced to India from China about 2000 years ago. Different parts of silk cocoons are used to make different textures of silk yarn.\n\nSilk skeins\n(Top, left to right): eri, tasar (semi-bleached ghicha), mulberry waste (fesua), muga (machine-reeled)\n(Bottom): muga (ghicha), tasar (jhurri), tasar (nassi), tasar (katia)\nAssam, Odisha and Madhya Pradesh, 2014\nV&A: IS.16 to 23-2015\n\nSilk cocoons\n(left to right): Muga silkworm, eri silkworm, mulberry silkworm\nAssam, 2006\nPrivate collection\n\nMulberry silk skeins\nBengal, 1818\nV&A: IS.57-1990 [03/10/2015-10/01/2016]\n [03/10/2015-10/01/2016]"@en . . "IS.57 to L-1990" . . "Striped silk bag with black fringes containing six labelled filatures (skeins of silk) and a corresponding letter with insert. The letter is dated 1818 and gives instructions for the purchase of raw silk in Bengal. The printed insert dated 1817 gives the current prices for silk purchase by region, quality, and buyer.\n\nFive of the six silk skeins originally had folded paper labels wrapped within them. The labels were removed and flattened in 2015 to reveal the identity of their corresponding skeins."@en . . "1817~, Bengal" . "0.51719999313354492188"^^ . . .