Silken Treasure
The Italian city of Como, celebrated for its silk and scenery, has inspired notables from Leonardo da Vinci and Giuseppe Verdi to Winston Churchill and George Clooney
- By Peter Ross Range
- Photographs by Scott S. Warren
- Smithsonian magazine, July 2008, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
A few days after my tour of Mantero's operations, Donatella Ratti, president of the Ratti Group, the other best-known silk company in the Como area, takes me on a tour of her offices. Situated on a plateau about 12 miles from Como with an unobstructed view of the Lombardy Alps, the headquarters houses administrative, sales and design teams in a single, 50,000-square-foot room. "We put women's scarf designers near the home furnishings people," says Ratti, "so each knows what the other is doing."
Style consultant Fabio Belotti, whose wild white hair makes me think of Albert Einstein, tosses silk swatches and design books around as he explains how he and his staff work with the fashion houses to find a winning look for the next collection. "Today we have to be very fast," he says. "In the United States they all do eight collections a year. We try to find something we love, but sometimes the client wants something else, so we collaborate with them."
Touring Ratti's printing plant, I'm amazed by the complexity of the process: the thousands of dye variations in what is called the "color kitchen," the ceiling-high racks of hundreds of silk screens, the baskets full of hanks of raw silk from China and the creative interchange between the print technicians and the designers. At one long table, a man was doing something I'd never before seen in previous visits to silk country: painting, not just printing, a long bolt of silk. Renato Molteni, who refuses to call himself an artist, was making art. Dipping a spatula—"they want the spatula look," he told me—into his dye buckets, he was creating, over and over again, an array of flowers on a large swath of silk. The diaphanous design—beige on white, with tinges of gray—was for dress material ordered by the Milanese fashion house of Dolce & Gabbana. One can only imagine what those dresses are going to cost. Molteni says simply, "You have to watch out that the flowers don't get too big."
"Creativity and high quality, that's our way to survive," says Ratti. "The Chinese are good at doing big quantities. They are not interested in making luxury. It's difficult, it's hard, it's expensive. They can't understand why we would print only 100 meters of something. But there are new rich people in the world—in China, in India, in Russia. They want luxury. They want real Ferraris, real Rolexes, real Hermès. They want Europe."
Former Time foreign correspondent Peter Ross Range writes about travel and international affairs.
Photographer Scott S. Warren is based in Durango, Colorado.
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Comments (5)
I bought a fine silk long sleeve blouse from Zara's in Edinburgh which featured digitally printed butterflies which were highly detailed and colourful. I would love to be able to purchase some of this material for an arts project, and thought I would try a long shot and see if anybody could help me source it? I can send a photo of the fabric if that would help.
Posted by Sylvia Woodford on August 29,2011 | 05:09 AM
I was so thrilled to discover the article "Silken Treasure" about the Lake Como region in the July issue of Smithsonian just before I left on on a Textile Study Tour to the Mediterranean in August 08. Lake Como and surrounding area was the last stop on the trip and I fell in love with the whole area. We stayed in Cernobbio and took the ferry taxi everywhere. I must go back for two days didn't put a dent in what there was to see much less to absorb this beautiful engaging place!
Posted by Karen Alexander on February 10,2009 | 03:07 AM
My daughter spent the summer in the town of Bellagio on Lake Como doing an internship with her college, Niagara University, from NY. She is a hospitality student. She worked at the Hotel DuLac, Hotel Bellagio and the Sporting Club. It was such a wonderful experience for her. My husband and I went to Bellagio to meet up with her and we thought Lake Como is one of the most beautiful sights we have ever seen.
Posted by Amy Prowak on September 4,2008 | 05:10 PM
I love living on Lake Como despite the fact that George Clooney still has not stopped by for an aperitivo. By the way, the name of the town he lives in is "Laglio" with an "o" rather than an "a" at the end.
Posted by Kate Manning on August 2,2008 | 10:12 AM
Lake Como, what divinity...it was the first Italian sight that met my eyes back in 1981, my first of many trips to Italy. We were met at the Milan airport and drove up to the Hotel in Bellagio right on the lake. I was so overwhelmed I wept. Our room overlooked the lake and it was terribly chilly at night that I slept with the featherbed mattress on top of me. We had dinner that night on the balcony of the hotel, my first taste of risotto with champagne. Flitting back and forth across the lake for days was an experience to remember and relish, Villa D'Este, Villa Carlotta, too gorgeous to describe. I went back to Como many times through the years, I plan to go back again because of your exquisite article. Do not know if it is affordable anymore. Yes, George Clooney is a man of taste and style, although I haven't seen any of his movies that excite me.
Posted by Francesca Capelouto on July 24,2008 | 04:59 PM