Fur - Fur skin

From www.leather-dictionary.com - The Leather Dictionary
Revision as of 15:48, 9 March 2017 by Admin (Talk | contribs)

Jump to: navigation, search

LEATHER-DICTIONARY.jpg


Dachs-01.jpg Bisam-01.jpg Murmeltier-01.jpg Fuchs-01.jpg

Mounted animals: Badger - Bisam - Marmot - Fox

 


Fur - Leather with hair

Leather can be produced both with and without hair depending on customers' wishes. A hide can have hair or not, whereas a fur always has hair. A fur is leather with very fine hair.

Fur - Fur skin

Fur is the skin of an animal which has a particularly dense and fine hair (more than 400 hairs per square centimetre). For example, mink fur, beaver fur, fox fur, sable fur and chinchilla fur etc. Other leather with hair on top is called "skin".


Pelze-01.jpg


In 2009 85% of all furs came from breeding animals, most commonly foxes, minks, marten dogs, nutrias and chinchillas.

In 2013 the turnover in the global fur trade was approx. 15 billion US $. Around one million people are employed in this sector worldwide. The main production countries are Greece, Russia, China and Denmark. In Germany, the turnover of the fur industry in 2012 was around 1.28 billion euros and there were 23 mink farms. There are about 7,200 fur farms in the EU, mainly in Denmark, the Netherlands, Poland and Finland. About 35 million mink furs and two million fox furs are produced annually in European farms.


Animal species for fur and skins with hair

There are many animal species and their subspecies, from which furs or skins are made. There are unprotected animals and protected animals. The following list contains a lot of animals used to produce fur and skins with hair, but it`s not complete.


Kaninchen-01.jpg Kaenguru-03.jpg Marderhund-Fell-01.jpg

Rabbit - Kangaroo - Marten dog

 

The different animal species for fur and skin production

Animal groups Animal species
Poultry animals Opossum, Wallaby, Kangaroo
Hare species Snow rabbit, wild rabbit, domestic rabbit (Chinchilla and many more breeding varieties)
Primates She-monkey
Cloven hoofed animals Guanako (young animal), vicuna, goats (young animal), domestic goat, domestic sheep (Persian, Merinos and many other species, often lambs), springbok, calves (from cattle), reindeer
Unpaired hoofed animals Foal (horse), zebra
Insectivorous Mole, silver bisam
Rodents Ground squirrel, bamboo rat, marmot, squirrel, beaver, hamster, bisam, nutria, chinchilla, viscacha
marten Ermine, weasel, mink, polecat, marten, sable, badger, skunk, otter, wolverine
Bears Black bear, polar bear, brown bear
Small bears Catfry, raccoon
dogs Wolf, coyote, jackal, fox (red fox, silver fox, pole fox and many more), marten dog
Cats Cats (domestic cats, wild cats and other species), lion, cougar, lynx, serval, cheetah, ocelot, jaguar, leopard, tiger
Water animals Seal



Wildkatze-Fell-01.jpg Fischotter-Fell-01.jpg Waschbaer-Fell-01.jpg

Wild cat - Fish Otter - Raccoon

 

Hermelin-Fell-Sommerkleid-01.jpg Hermelin-Fell-Winterkleid-01.jpg

Ermine with summer and winter fur.

 

Leather is mostly produced from animals that are kept for meat production. This is not the case with fur animals. The meat of goats and rabbits is mostly used for human consumption, but the meat of most of the fur animals is not eaten. In some countries, it is even forbidden to eat some of these animals.

Furrier

A furrier is a craftsman who processes fur into clothing. This includes repairs and cleaning and care of furs.


Fur coat 01.jpg Fur clothing 02.jpg

For the older generation, furs were a sign of prosperity and provided warmth in the winter.

 

The cleaning of furs

In case of soiling, skins or furs can be carefully brushed. Always ask advice from a furrier who is experienced in the cleaning of skins and furs. Specialists use moistened wood chips in a special cleaning process for furs and sensitive skins. Insensitive furs and skins can also be washed with special leather detergents. In particular, old skins and furs can be extremely sensitive to wet cleaning and can irreversibly harden and shrink.

Animal protection and labelling

The trade of skins and furs of certain species of animals, particularly those threatened with extinction, has been restricted or prohibited on the basis of species protection worldwide. Many animal protectionists reject any trade in fur.

There is no uniform regulation on the labelling of furs. Single EU countries have stricter rules. Since 2008, the Origin Assured (TM) label indicates that fur products come from a country where approved regulations and standards apply to fur production.


Video about furs

Fur production.


Cleaning a fur coat.


How to make fur blankets.



Hides with hair on top

Skin on which the hair is still present, is referred to as fur or skin. Typical terms for skins are lion's skin, sheepskin, cowhide, bearskin etc.


Lammfell-Stuele-01.jpg


According to a study from 2014, children who have slept on animal fur or hides during the first three months of life have a 79% reduced risk of developing asthma later.


Leopard-01.jpg Bärenfell-02.jpg

Head of leopard fur. - Bear skin.

 

Zebra-Fell-01.jpg Bisonfell-01.jpg

Zebra hide and bison hide.

 

Alpakafell-01.jpg Alpakafell-02.jpg

Wonderful warm Alpaca slippers from Lima in Peru. - Alpaca fur-accessories of the market in Aguas Calientes, Peru, below Machu Picchu.

 

Ziegenfell-01.JPG Fell-Wildschwein-01.jpg

Goat- and wild boar skin.

 

Kuhfell-gefaerbt-001.jpg Kuhfell-Zebra-Tiger-Muster.jpg

Exotic dyed cow and calf skins.

 

Auto-Fell-Sitzschoner-01.jpg

Skins as covers on car seats.


Fellmütze-04.jpg Fellmütze-03.jpg

Fur hats in Moscow.

 



Additional information



Colourlock-GB-03.jpg

WE UNDERSTAND LEATHER - WWW.COLOURLOCK.COM