Alpaca fibre, once referred to as the Gold of the Andes, or Fibre of the gods, is now an affordable luxury that can be enjoyed right here (wherever you are) in the heart of winter...and summer! How?
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Alpacas are sheared once per year to harvest their renewable resource- buttery soft, ultra warm fibre. An average alpaca shears between 4 and 12 pounds of fibre/year. What gives alpaca fibre its value? Unique characteristics and rarity certainly have a role, however, the prime
factor determining the dollar value of a fleece is the fineness or grade.
Grade 1 fleece is under 20 microns and is called Royal Baby alpaca.
Unique amoung other natural fibres, alpaca comes in 22 recognized natural colors in a range of fineness between 14 and 35 microns. It is buttery smooth and silky as a result of it's smooth scale structure as seen under a microscope. It is compared more to hair than to sheeps wool. For this reason many people "allergic" to wool can wear good alpaca as
it is not prickly. Alpaca is hypo-allergenic as it contains no lanolin. An Australian study found alpaca to be one of the warmest fibres in the world, second only to polar bear fleece. (I am very happy with my alpaca blanket, thankyou, someone else can go for the gold on this one :) Other textile characteristics include superior tensile strength(second only to silk), elasticity, non-flammability- the fiber will not burn unless in direct contact with a flame. Alpaca fibre has low absorption and high wickability
meaning it keeps you dry even in damp/wet environments which equals comfortable warmth-PERFECT for our Canadian winters! Alpaca yarn/cloth has a natural brightness or shine, soft handle, and exquisite drapery. It does not pill and maintains its new appearance for a very long time if properly cared for. Alpaca fibre is easy to care for. See care instructions.
Our harvest is considered a rare specialty fibre in the textile world,
as are all other natural fibres (cashmere, angora, mohair) except sheeps
wool. To give perspective, sheep are raised world wide and in 1994 alone, produced 432,000 tons of fleece (source: Wool International). Alpacas world wide produce approximately 4,000 tons of fleece/year
mostly in South America. By virtue of its rarity, alpaca fibre holds its value.
In the global commodity market, fibre prices fluctuate. Recent
wool prices were around $2.25/pound; the same high grade alpaca fibre (tops) ready to be spun, sells for about $8. to $12./pound. The beauty of the alpaca world is that we, in North America do not have enough consistent supply to play in that global market. By value adding we become creators of price and do not have to settle for a dictated
commodity price that may be below the cost of production, as many
other farmers do. By using best practices of a fibre farmer shearing and sorting, by small scale on-farm processing, use of mini-mills or participation in fibre co-ops we can take advantage of local and internet marketing of value added goods, realizing prices up to $50. - $60 /lb.
or higher depending on your location, location, location.
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