While I used silk for years, and still do, I am taking the position that silk is not necessarily the best thread for pearls. My point being is that it is OK to explore threads other than silk. All threads , including silk have pluses and minuses.
I have found silk thread to knot pearls to often be an inferior choice because of many of its natural properties. The colors of silk threads are silk's strongest suit, in my book.
I find the stretchy tendency of silk - especially when the pearls are large or in ropes with weight- to be exasperating. In any case, the stretchy quality is a built in obsolescence- for the sake of the silk - not the pearls.
Silk frays with any kind of abrasion, it degrades with body secretions, and it soaks up sweat and oils as readily as it soaks up water.
As a beader who made her first necklace with seed beads and monfilimant fishing line- I have explored every thread available to beaders. I have used most of them, including artificial sinew to do projects. I even like wire for necklaces; I have used it a lot-- and I see it used on pearls all the time.
when I order finished pieces from China, I am surprised that they almost always use nylon thread of some kind, even though many claim it is silk. Yeah. like "Tahitian Black" is some kind of Tomfoolery.
Any way, I was one of the first to buy detulon; I had trouble with it kinking just before you pull it tight. It must be spun in the wrong direction for me.....or something.
So I just want to make the case that silk is not the only alternative for knotting; there are other alternatives that lack the stretchy and absorbent qualities of silk.
I love using coloured silk with pearls. I do use some powerpro, but really, I prefer silk for the pure luxury.
My favourite colour combinations are white pearls with aquamarine silk, peach pearls with lavender-blue silk, and chocolate pearls with gold silk. Dusty toned pearls wirg coffee coloured silk etc etc. I wish I could get jade or sapphire silk to string with peacock fireball pearls. However, toning colours seem to sell best, sigh. )
Jan1
Outr family has been stringing for 50 years. The founder of our firm,my mother, was very able to use "Rite dye" to color white silk cord to the color she desired. Practicing with amounts enabeled her to dye just a few feet of the silk she needed.
pearl-man
I have still not used stringth, though I see it comes in a number of colors. I am fairly sure that it is a polyamide nylon thread too.Is not liking the feeling of the thread the only downside of Stringth for you? Does it stretch or soak up dirt and body oils? I think Stringth is probably a nylon thread too, but I am not sure.I bought some Stringth from Rio Grande and I hate it. It just turned out to be a waste of money insteadIt feels so plastic-y and horrible when I knot it.
I have still not used stringth, though I see it comes in a number of colors. I am fairly sure that it is a polyamide nylon thread too.Is not liking the feeling of the thread the only downside of Stringth for you? Does it stretch or soak up dirt and body oils? I think Stringth is probably a nylon thread too, but I am not sure.
Stringth bead cord is made from synthetic fibers, so it is strong and less likely to fray, shred, or stretch than conventional cord. It's "slide-easy" finish allows even, consistent knots. Coat the cord end with superglue to form a self needle. Not all colors are available in all sizes.