What is necessary to know about fur before buying?
Part 1 "Value, beauty and durability. What is more important?"
You have bought a fur coat, have stirred it up, and it has turned into a leather coat!... - Acceptable? - If not then this information is for you!
Usability of fur is arbitrarily divided into five groups, first of which is the most wear-proof. Otter, beaver and raccoon furs make this group. The second group is formed of sable, mink, black polar fox and silver fox furs. The third group is astrakhan fur, marten, white polar fox, and sheepskin. The fourth group is squirrel, ermine, and chinchilla. The fifth group is rabbit and hare.
Comparative wear resistance of various kinds of skin is given below, thus wearability of otter fur is accepted for 100 points (*).
Otter, uncut 100 Otter, cut 95 Wolverine 100 Bear, brown 95 Beaver Kamchatka 95 Beaver, river, uncut 85 Raccoon, natural 75 Raccoon, dyed 60 Sable, natural 80 Silver fox 75 Silver fox, toned 65 Black fox 70 Mink, natural 70 Mink, dyed 55 Astrakhan fur 60 Polar fox, blue 60 Wolf, natural 60 Wolf, dyed 40 Sheepskin 55 Muskrat 45 Polar fox, white 50 Fox, natural 40 Fox, dyed 35 Nutria, uncut 40 Jackal 25 Squirrel, natural 25 Squirrel, dyed 20 Ermine 25 Karakul 15 Chinchilla 15 Rabbit 12 Brown hare 5
* The information given above extends to furs which have lasted all the stages of processing according to the world standards.
Thus, when buying a product made of a hare or the rabbit, you should realize that it will be strewed as a New Year's fur-tree in a month after The Christmas. Well, what if you plan to wear your kind of fur coat after half a century? Then limit the choice to an otter or a beaver.
In addition, it is necessary to remember that fur dyed by an acid method loses 5-15 % of the durability, and toning reduces durability by 5-10%. Cutting of fur, on the contrary, increases wearability of a fur product by 20-40% since short-haired fur doesn't harden.
And now, let's talk about the value and beauty of fur. On this parameter it is divided into three groups. In the first, most expensive group is the fur of a sable, chinchilla, the black and silver fox, the American mink, a marten, a beaver, an otter, a bear, and the white and black wolf. In the second group, which is average priced, belong furs of the red fox, squirrel, wolverine and ferret. The fur of rabbit and hare concerns are the third group.
There is a proverb in Russia: "Whoever was warned - was armed!" Now you are armed and can go to the seller of hare's caps! :)
Continuation in 2 parts…
Alex & Katja Romanoff |