It's for milling the ink colours i believe. The reason for my little disclaimer "so much so that i'm not even sure it exists" is that i have never found anything (aside from the initial claim) to suggest it does EXCEPT for the fact that hermes prints colours that are normally impossible to find in silk dye (you can cheat with digital printing now but that's pixels of CMYK and not a true pigment). I was told about the machinery by a french academic expert in the luxury industry, who cited inside knowledge and never offered proof. But if i had super secret machinery i'm sure i too would keep it secret.pur_sang wrote:I learnt something new today! Will you be able to point me to a link to read more about this? Thank you.lxlloyd wrote:While there are certain cases in which the quality is not transferrable (Hermes and it's legendary (so much so that i'm not even sure it exists) unique silk printing machinery that is the most detailed (I believe it has the most pigments) in the world....... (no-one knows how it was built and they certainly aren't going to let people take it apart to copy it)) they are few and far between.
As for the actual process, it involves hand engraving, silk from brazil woven for three months, invisible stitching of rolled hems and much arguing about colours:
http://searchingforstyle.com/2012/04/th ... mes-scarf/