by Dana Thomas
A CHINESE FACTORY can be a bit like a university campus. The place is populated with thousands of unmarried young people ages sixteen to about twenty-six. They often live in dorms on the property, eat off metal trays at long tables in a cafeteria, and ride bikes or take the bus to town during their time off to hit a karaoke bar. One factory I visited has a game room with pool tables, Ping-Pong, and Foosball; a basketball court; a convenience store; and a computer room. A gym was under construction. There’s a doctor onsite and day care. And the place was absolutely spotless. “If it’s not a healthy environment, then the workers aren’t healthy and our goods reflect it,” the manufacturer told me, adding, “We are one of the few exceptions.” Factories that produce luxury goods have a couple of thousand workers, small by comparison to mass brands. “A Nike factory will have twenty to thirty thousand people,” the manufacturer told me. “It’s a town.”
Most of the workers are young women, somewhere between the ages of twenty-two and twenty-six. The legal working age in China is sixteen—though, the manufacturer noted, “there are tons of kids in regular factories here who have fake papers.” Only about 15 percent of the workers in Dongguan are locals. The rest come from the poor cities in the north and from the countryside and require a permit from their hometowns to go elsewhere to work. They earn about $120 a month and send it all home. “They come to work and get out,” he said. “They work enough to support a family, build a house. In five to six years, they earn between fifty and sixty thousand RMB, which is about $6,000 to $7,000. The workers have no friends. No relatives nearby. They don’t mind doing overtime. They don’t care if they are working long hours or don’t have fun. They just work. It’s a big cultural difference.”
At the factory I visited in October 2005, the workday is 8:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m and 2:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m., and if there is overtime, 9:00 p.m. to 11:00 p.m. at one and a half times the usual hourly rate. All workers have Sunday off. This is unusual: most factories in China run 24/7, and shifts can last up to ten hours. I arrived in the early evening, just as the workers were about to go on break. In the four-floor factory there is nearly twenty-seven thousand square feet of production space. The windows were open and slatted to allow for cross-breezes. Fans sat silently in the corners; summers in the Pearl River delta are stiflingly hot and humid. It takes about ten months to build a factory in China from scratch to production—one-fourth the time it does in the United States. In one large room of fifteen thousand square feet, there were fifteen rows of long worktables. At each table stood about a dozen thin young women in pale blue short-sleeve shirts and dark trousers busily gluing, hammering, and stitching seams on sewing machines. They were surrounded by bags with coveted luxury brand logos. A room this size processes fifteen to twenty thousand units a month. Unlike at Hermès in France or Gucci in Italy, it’s all assembly-line work. I watched one girl as she glued handles onto the outside of a canvas tote. She placed a cardboard pattern on top of the canvas to make sure the straps were attached in the right place, hammered them, then handed the bag off to the next girl, who in turn stitched the handles to the canvas on a machine. The glue girl did about two bags a minute. When it was dinnertime, the girls put everything neatly in its place, covered the machines—in case of rain—and walked out, single file, giggling and gossiping as they crossed the common to the six-story dorm for dinner in the ground-floor canteen. Each girl had a photo ID badge on a chain around her neck.
Not surprisingly, manufacturers in China are starting to experience problems. Supplies are going up in price. There are electricity shortages because there are so many factories. And there’s a shortage of what is known as “sophisticated labor”: work that requires refined skills. As workers gain more education, they demand more in wages and perks. Salaries went up 30 percent from 2000 to 2005, from $90 to $120 a month, simply to retain workers. The gyms and computer rooms help, too.
The brands aren’t making it any easier. “They get all the human rights complaints,” explained the manufacturer. “It’s killing me because they put constraints and complain that we don’t pay enough. I say, ‘If you want it made same way for the same wages then just produce in your country.’ We never want to treat the workers badly because we want to make the product. But the brands are helping the workers, giving them more value.” Nevertheless, there are still casualties. On the way to Dongguan, we read a story in the paper of a worker who, just the day before, left the factory in an industrial zone in Guangzhou after a twenty-four-hour shift, collapsed in the street, and died. “Pure fatigue,” the manufacturer told me. “It’s one of thousands of cases here.”
CHAPTER SEVEN
THE NEEDLE AND THE DAMAGE DONE
If there were no luxury, there would be no poor.
—HENRY HOME, LORD KAMES
CAN YOU SMELL the silk?” Laudomia Pucci asked.
We were standing in the entrance of the Antico Setificio Fiorentino, the oldest silk factory in Italy, maybe even in the world, housed in an eighteenth-century building near the Amerigo Vespucci Bridge in Florence. Before us sat a rack of big wooden spools wrapped with luminescent silk thread in hues that only nature can produce: the dark blue of the deep Mediterranean, a gold the color of wheat at harvest, a fuchsia like French tulips in springtime.
I took a deep breath and could indeed smell the silk: a damp musky smell of forests and cocoons.
Silk is known as the queen of textiles. It has been used for Chinese emperors’ robes and Catherine the Great’s wedding dress, for Italian noble families’ banners and the Pope’s Swiss Guard flags, and for the thread that stitched war wounds closed. Skiers wear socks made of silk because it naturally wicks moisture away from the body. Ben Franklin flew a silk kite during his electricity experiments. Today silk remains the fabric of choice for couture gowns, whether they are in taffeta, satin duchesse, organdy, or tulle. “Silk does for the body what diamonds do for the hand,” designer Oscar de la Renta once said.
Laudomia Pucci, a slim, elegant brunette in her early forties, is the daughter of Marchese Emilio Pucci di Barsento, the founder of Pucci, the Florentine luxury fashion brand known for its psychedelic-print silk jersey clothes that has been majority-owned by LVMH since 2000. The Puccis have deep roots in Florence. In the fifteenth century, the family served as political advisers to the ruling Medicis. Their sumptuous thirteenth-century palazzo, on Via de’ Pucci, is decorated with elaborate frescos, and their family chapel in Santissima Annunziata is a Renaissance gem.
Emilio Pucci was raised with his younger brother and sister by severe nannies. An accomplished athlete, Pucci excelled in swimming, tennis, fencing, and skiing. He studied agriculture at the University of Milan and the University of Georgia, and received a skiing scholarship at Reed University in Portland, Oregon, where he earned his master’s degree in social sciences. While there, he designed uniforms for the ski team. He later earned a Ph.D. in political science from the University of Florence. He was a member of the 1934 Italian Olympic ski team and served as a pilot in the Italian air force in World War II, returning “covered with medals,” Laudomia boasted.
After the war, he worked as a ski instructor in Switzerland and, continuing his dual passions for innovation and skiing, designed the first slim stretch ski pants with an elastic stirrup. They appeared in Harper’s Bazaar in 1948 and soon were the preferred look on ski slopes around the world. The following summer, Pucci opened a small boutique on Capri, the jet-set haven just off the coast of Naples, and filled it with clothes for “island life,” like cropped pants, dubbed Capri pants, in cheerful colors like Mediterranean blue, bougainvillea pink, and sunshine yellow. In 1954, he officially launched the House of Pucci. With the fabric mills in Como, he created print silk jersey that clung sensually to the body. Originally production was in Florence, in little ateliers around town. He signed the psychedelic patterns “Emilio,” respectfully leaving the Pucci family off and out of the limelight. “He believed women had to be free to move, no corsets, or girdles,” Laudomia
explained.
By the mid-1950s, the Antico Setificio Fiorentino was in a state of semi-abandonment. In 1958, Emilio Pucci purchased the majority share of the factory from a consortium of fellow Florentine noble families, effectively saving it from the wrecking ball. “It was supposed to be bought by a hotel corporation and turned into a modern hotel,” Laudomia said incredulously. Pucci poured some of his sizable fortune into the factory and commissioned it to reproduce the damasks and taffetas that for centuries had been used to decorate the family’s palazzo. The looms have been singing ever since.
In the spring of 2004, I rang up Laudomia and asked her to show me the Antico Setificio Fiorentino. “It’s really a special place,” she told me as we drove across the Arno and turned the corner onto Via Bartolini. You walk down a narrow stone path draped in wisteria, cross a small courtyard garden where for centuries the children of weavers have played, and enter a simple faded yellow houselike building with thick walls, worn brick floors, and big airy rooms with high beamed ceilings. The first room is the warping room, where the silk thread is prepared for the looms. One of the warping machines is a tall wooden cylindrical contraption called Orditoio, built in the eighteenth century according to plans by Leonardo da Vinci. It is the only one known to be in existence today. “You have to kick it to move it,” Laudomia explained to me. The other warping machine at the factory is a Benninger from 1879.
In the next small room sat big plastic bags stuffed with skeins of gloriously colored silk thread. Until the 1920s, the Setificio dyed silk, most of it produced in the region. Silk production in Italy disappeared after World War II. Today silk arrives from China in bulk, already dyed and ready to be spooled. You can tell that it has not been treated chemically, because you can hear it rustle. Laudomia took a bolt of emerald green taffeta, called ermisino—“the grandfather of taffeta,” she said—and scrunched the fabric. “Look,” she said, “it stands up.” The fabric held the scrunched shape, like tinfoil. “That’s what silk is supposed to do,” she told me. “Silk is a living thing. Today, manufacturers push it so much, they kill it and destroy it. Weaving by hand respects the body of the thread.”
Next comes the pattern making. Back in the Renaissance, the noble families each had looms in their palazzi to produce silks to decorate the house and dress the family members. Laudomia tells me that when the oldest son married, the family would create a new damask pattern that would bear the family’s name. A silk fabric design was also created when a first son was born, and the family owned exclusively it until he died.
The largest and noisiest room of the otherwise serene Setificio is the weaving room. It is there that all the damasks and moirés and even some linens are woven by workers on manual looms. Though it is a magical room of movement, sound, and richesse, it is a sad shadow of what it once was. In November 1966, the Arno flooded and the Setificio, which sits on the river’s banks, filled with water and mud. Most of the patterns, designs, and archives—which included the records of what each loom had produced for centuries—were destroyed, but the looms were salvaged. All are from 1780 and are pedaled with the right leg; the hand pulls a rope, and the shuttle slides through. When I visited one woman was weaving a sixteenth-century lampas called Princess Mary of England; it is made of fine gold thread and advances only sixty centimeters a day.
Workers require five years of training to be able to weave silk and linen at the Setificio. It’s a trade passed down from generation to generation. Back in the 1920s, Florentine girls came after school to learn how to weave on small looms built for them. Today, there are thirteen weavers, mostly women. Each fabric is made from beginning to end by one weaver because otherwise you would be able to see the change of hand in the cloth. Most weavers at the Setificio are in their thirties or forties. Back in the factory’s heyday, the weavers’ talent was considered so precious that when they decided to marry, the factory would offer handsome dowries and other concessions to get them to stay on.
The Setificio is underwritten by the noble families of Italy who are still shareholders, and it receives commissions from all over the world. In 2000, the looms produced the silk for the costumes for Siena’s annual Renaissance parade. The factory has also created damasks for one of the royal palaces in Copenhagen and won the commission over Lyon to redo two rooms of the Kremlin; it continues to make silk pouches for potpourri for the Farmacia di Santa Maria Novella, the famed seventeenth-century apothecary that operates in the heart of old Florence. Next door to the factory is a shop that sells the Setificio’s silks and linens. While there, I admired an ivory silk and linen weave called Spinone. It cost €125 a meter. Laudomia saw my interest. “The problem is, once you do one chair with this fabric, the rest of the room looks awful,” she said with a laugh.
SILK IS CREATED through the process of sericulture, or silkworm farming. Silkworms are not worms at all, but rather caterpillars, and the Bombyx mori is the primary variety used for commercial silk. The Bombyx is raised on farms in China, Thailand, and India, where it feasts on mulberry leaves and increases its bodyweight ten thousand times in its four-week life span to about the size of an adult thumb. After four moltings, it spins a two-inch-long waterproof cocoon, ejecting liquid silk at about a foot a minute. Two weeks later, it emerges as a moth and mates like crazy for a few hours. The female lays three hundred to five hundred eggs and dies in a few days. The eggs take six weeks to twelve months to hatch. A few moths are allowed to hatch to continue the process. The remaining cocoons are steamed to kill the caterpillar, washed by hand in hot water to remove the gummy substance called sericin, and unwound on a reeling machine, which spools the filaments on a bobbin. The work is swift, the water filthy, smelly, and very hot. Usually five to eight filaments are spun together to create a thread. On some farms in India, young girls make thread by hand, unwinding the cocoons and slapping and twisting the filaments across their thighs.
The Chinese began to produce silk in the third millennium BC for exclusive use by the emperor and his court. The Chinese kept sericulture to themselves for centuries—anyone found guilty of disclosing its secrets was sentenced to death by torture—but the fabric itself made its way westward. When Alexander the Great conquered Persia in 331 BC, he discovered swaths of the luminous silk. The five-thousand-mile Silk Road began in Xi’an, passed through the Jade Gate, and crossed the Turkestan desert, the Iranian plateau, and Asia Minor to Constantinople. There, silk and other exotic goods were loaded on ships and transported to the Mediterranean’s capitals. Travel on the Silk Road peaked during China’s prosperous and culturally rich Tang Dynasty (AD 618–907), and glorious cities along the route, such as Tashkent, Bukhara, and Samarkand, flourished. In Rome, only the wealthiest could afford silk—it was said to be worth its weight in gold—and they wore it so lavishly that the government passed sumptuary laws to restrain its conspicuous display. Caesar’s heir, Octavian, eventually restricted the importation of silk because the material was too costly.
There are many legends about how the knowledge of sericulture arrived in Italy. One recounts that in the sixth century, the Roman emperor Justinian sent two monks to China to smuggle cocoons in a hollow cane back to Italy. Another tells of an Asian princess who brought the fabric to Italy as a bride. The most generally accepted, however, is that of Italian merchants in the Middle Ages who discovered the rich iridescent fabric in Hormuz, Persia, dubbed ormesino; learned how it was made; took it home; and reproduced it. Today it is known today as ermisino, the taffeta that Laudomia scrunched.
One of the early centers for silk weaving was in the Tuscan town of Lucca. In the fourteenth century, several of Lucca’s weavers settled in Florence and opened the city’s first silk workshops. The city’s rulers granted them tax exemptions to pursue their art. The Arte della Seta, the silk weavers’ guild, was formed and drew up strict guidelines for silk manufacturing. By the mid-fifteenth century, Florentine farmers were required to plant mulberry bushes on their land to feed silkworms. The noble families of Florence, including t
he Puccis, wholly embraced the luxurious silks for both decor and clothing, as detailed in portraits by such Renaissance masters as Leonardo da Vinci, Raphael, and Botticelli. By the fifteenth century, silk was a symbol of Florence’s wealth and refinement: when Cosimo de’ Medici, the Grand Duke of Tuscany, arrived in Florence, he noted that the streets were filled with “fine tapestries and hangings…There was not a shop to be seen that did not put on a great show of works in silk and sumptuous gold.”
The Como Lake region in northern Italy was at the time a center for wool dying and weaving. The wool came from Scotland and Spain, across Flanders, down the Rhine to Zurich, and over the Alps to Como, where the lake’s pure water was perfect for dyeing. When turf wars broke out across Europe, the wool route shut down. The ruler of the region, Gian Galeazzo Sforza, and his uncle Ludovico Sforza decided to bring silk production from Florence to Como to make up the loss. Como has remained a textile manufacturing center ever since. In the fifteenth century, King Louis XI of France set up silk manufacturing in Lyon to stop French aristocrats from buying the fabric from Italy, and the industry flourished there for centuries.
ON A RAINY SPRING afternoon in 2006, I drove from Milan through the congested industrial northern suburbs to Como, the Alpine lake resort, to meet Michele Canepa, owner of Taroni, the last silk factory in the city. Canepa is one of those friendly yet elegant Italians who instantly make you feel welcome and important. When I met him, he was dressed conservatively yet impeccably in a brown herringbone jacket, charcoal gray flannel trousers, a good blue-and-white-striped shirt with French cuffs, and a conservative black knit tie. His longish chestnut hair was slicked back neatly, and his eyes were smiling. The Taroni headquarters dates to the early twentieth century; Canepa’s office was filled with 1970s contemporary decor, including a glass-top table for a desk and molded plastic chairs with chrome legs. Outside his small window a strong old magnolia was in bloom, many of its petals scattered about, knocked off by the pouring rain.