The Golden Thread

How Fabric Changed History

Paperback, 368 pages

Published July 13, 2021 by Liveright, Liveright Publishing Corporation.

ISBN:
978-1-63149-901-2
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4 stars (1 review)

All textiles begin with a twist. From colourful 30,000-year old threads found on the floor of a Georgian cave to what the linen wrappings of Tutankhamun's mummy actually meant; from the Silk Roads to the woollen sails that helped the Vikings reach America 700 years before Columbus; from the lace ruffs that infuriated the puritans to the Indian calicoes and chintzes that powered the Industrial Revolution, our continuing reinvention of cloth tells fascinating stories of human ingenuity.

When we talk of lives hanging by a thread, being interwoven, or part of the social fabric, we are part of a tradition that stretches back many thousands of years. Fabric has allowed us to achieve extraordinary things and survive in unlikely places, and this book shows you how -- and why.

With a cast that includes Chinese empresses, Richard the Lionheart and Bing Crosby, Kassia St Clair takes us on the run …

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Review of 'The Golden Thread' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

I checked out this book because I saw a museum show about the famous haute couture work of Guo Pei and saw this title all over the gift store. It started out with a series of essays on some of the biggest fabrics through history: the domestication of natural fibers such as wool (Norse people), flax (Egyptians), silk (Mongols), cotton (USA). A lot of the narrative in these early chapters relied on the ways modern archaeologists have found to learn something about ancient ancient fibers prone to decay. The chapter on the way lace played a role in European society in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries was as much about the social significance of the fabric as the practical difficulties to produce it.

Then came some recent innovations such as the development of clothing for mountaineering, polar expeditions, competitive swimming and running, the design of space suits by NASA, and …