Sample of "Polarian" (trade name) mohair and wool plush faux fur, in black; approx. 5.5" x 5", variation of the faux fur called "Astrachan" or "Astrakhan" or Persian lamb. From a group of European-made faux furs donated by importer H. Herrman Sternbach & Co., NYC, in 1884. This sample is a woven fabric with a cotton back and a mohair and wool curled and pressed pile face. This sample has less pronounced curl in the pile, which has been sheared more evenly than the samples in T6737. The fabric was made at Huddersfield, England. / Accompanying documentation in the accession folder reads:"These goods are made in Huddersfield, England by machines specially designed for the purpose; they are made from 24-50 inches in width. The back or body of the cloth is cotton, the curl or pile is sheep's wool and mohair. The cotton warp is off the beam as in ordinary weaving but the pile is run from another beam fixed on the top of the loom and run through a separate appliance which brings it in conjunction with the other part of the loom, where the weft isthrown through the warp and the pile warp is woven in at the same time. The pile warp is twisted very hard to make the curl. After the goods are woven they are cut evenly by machine to give them a natural appearance. These goods are dyed and finished after they are made. The natives of Astrachan, a little place bordering on southeast Russia, formerly wore the real skins of which the specimens are imitations." 2nd page: "Specimens of manufactures, all designed in imitation of the wool, or fur, or hair of those animals whose natural skins have been used from the earliest times as a means of clothing; for which their great warmth has made them especially adapted. / Thus the sheep, goat, camel, buffalo, bear, fox, seal, beaver, otter, and manyothers have been laid under contribution to supply those wants which the rigors of climate rendered necessary. / The great beauty as well as comfort of many of these furs and skins have always been sought after, but their cost and the difficulty of obtaining them have precluded the possibility of their possession, by any but the wealthier classes. / Human ingenuity has therefore been taxed to rpovide something which should as near as possible resemble both in appearance and comfort these much valued articles. / This has been accomplished, and the various imitations of furs, skins, etc. now not only nearly equal the original in point of appearance, but actually surpass them in point of durability, while the comparatively low price at which they can be produced places them within the reach of everyone."