The Star Malaysia

Phan weaves ‘lotus silk’ into new trade

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WEAVER Phan Thi Thuan hitches up her trousers as she wades into a lotus paddy to gather the stems needed to make a rare and highly sought-after thread.

Her great-aunt made and sold traditiona­l silk to the French during colonial rule, passing the technique on to Thuan, who started weaving when she was six in her village on the outskirts of Hanoi.

But three years ago, Thuan spotted a new opportunit­y in the lotus stems left to rot in nearby fields after the seeds had been harvested for food. She began extracting the fibre found in the stems to make “lotus silk”, an exclusive fabric highly sought by fashion designers.

“I was the first in Vietnam,” the 65-year-old said proudly.

“I started all by myself, then I trained those already in my workshop,” she added.

Farmers often toil for hours to clear lotus paddies of rotting stems, which ruin the soil and bring unwanted insects.

But thanks to her vision, Thuan today leads a team of about 20 mostly female workers who snap off the stems in the paddies, before they tease out the fragile fibres and roll them into thread.

Dressed head-to-toe in brown silk and wearing a pearl necklace – the same outfit she dons as she picks through the lotus paddies – Thuan describes her work.

It’s a painstakin­g process – a large scarf requires the thread of around 9,200 stems and would take one worker around two months to complete – but Thuan insists it’s worth it.

“I see this as my task now, to generate jobs, and to do my bit for the environmen­t,” she said, adding that during busy periods, she employs hundreds to weave from home.

The profits are another reason to persevere.

While a regular silk scarf might go for US$20 (RM83), even a smaller lotus version – popular with pre-coronaviru­s tourists – fetches more than 10 times that.

 ??  ?? Quality control: Thuan checking the quality of natural raw material from a lotus stem to be processed into silk.
Quality control: Thuan checking the quality of natural raw material from a lotus stem to be processed into silk.

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