A silt fence provides temporary sediment control. Frequently a silt fence needs to be paired with a sediment trap to ensure the yard does not wash away.
It would use silk as its substrate and destroy the garment. Silk is a protein.
nope
Silk sheets can be cleaned in the washing machine after hand washing them a few time before hand. It is important to use a mild detergent such as Charlie's Liquid Laundry Soap and let them air dry out of direct sunlight.
Silk is not made out of silk worms. Silk is made by silk worms which spin to make a cocoon for themselves.
To care for your silk clothing, four aspects should be mentioned. * Washing: Do not use washing machine and cannot be rubbed against clothes that are not smooth. Steep silk clothing separately in cold water about 5 to 10 minutes, then use low sudsing washing powder, neutral soap or special detergent for silk to clean them. * Drying: Do not insolate, do not dry by heat, do not wring out. Shake off water, let inside out, flattened, put in an airy and shady place, dry naturally. Wait for 70% dry, then take in for ironing. * Ironing: Silk easy to crumple up if not carefully handled. Spray a little of water evenly on the 70% dry clothes, wait 3 to 5 minutes, put a wet towel between the iron and clothes, then control the temperature below 150 ℃ to iron, do it softly. * Storage: Do washing, ironing before long time storage. Keep sealed from dust and insects.
silk (: China tried to keep it a secret a long time ago silk (: China tried to keep it a secret a long time ago They also traded cloth and spices, such as cinnamon.
because they were all allergic to silk
You sew weights at periodic places in the bottom hem of the curtains. They must be small and only heavy enough to keep them from blowing away.
The Chinese didn't keep SILK a secret. They kept the methods of silk-MAKING a secret. The reason the Chinese kept silk-making a secret is because it was very EXTREMELY valuable. It was also a valuable trade good in distant lands.
To dispose of silk, it is best to reuse it for a project or give it away. You may also give your silk clothing to a resale shop or charity store.
Yes
Every time I have washed raw silk in water, I have destroyed the luster of the garment. Dry clean only sadly.