The English climate is too cold for rearing silkworms, but a silk industry developed in the late Middle Ages processing imported thread and producing silk goods. The art of making silk thread was developed in England by the silk throwsters of London, Leek (Staffordshire), Macclesfield and Congleton (both in Cheshire). Early references to silk weaving in England occur in the trade protection Acts of the last half of the 15th Century banning the import of foreign silk goods.
In England the origin of this important industry was located in Spitalfields, dating from the revocation of the Edict of Nantes by Louis XIV in 1685, when the French Protestants, driven by persecution from their own country, took refuge in England in large numbers. Long before this, however, silk weavers from abroad had settled in England, and during the reign of Henry VIII a considerable number of silk workers, principally from Rouen, made their homes in this country.
The declaration of the Spitalfields Act in the 1790s had forced manufacturers of silk in the East End of London to consider moving away to evade the act and its consequences. Towns on the Essex Suffolk border such as Braintree, Halstead and Sudbury found themselves outside the scope of the Act. Sudbury is a centre for silk weaving and both Gainsborough and Stephen Walters are based in this historic centre, with the only other manufacturer of silk in Whitchurch, Hampshire.
Degrees and postgraduate study
Textile Design Degrees – There are a number of universities and colleges that offer BA Textile Design and some that have specific degrees for weaving. Some will have weaving studios and technicians on hand to support weavers and it is worth checking which ones have the best facilities.
Design Crafts Degrees – Some universities and colleges offer a BA Design Crafts or BA Contemporary Design Crafts that covers a range of craft disciplines, including textiles.
There are a number of universities and colleges that offer MA and PhD opportunities for Textile Design and Design Crafts.
Apprenticeships
The following apprenticeships are available for weavers working in textiles manufacturing:
Mills
The craft of silk weaving is at serious risk of no longer being practised in the UK. There is a shrinking base of craftspeople who practise the craft, with only three manufacturers left in the UK. Gainsborough Silk Weavers, Stephen Walters and Whitchurch Silk Mill. There are very few training opportunities and these are limited to learning on the job at each weaving mill, and the industry is reliant on a few practitioners who hold the skills and their willingness to pass them on to the next generation. The industry suffers from low financial viability, with two commercial silk mills having closed in the last decade (Glemsford & Vanners) and Gainsborough was close to closure before a buyout was agreed a few years ago. Both Stephen Walters and Gainsborough report buoyant orders.
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