A crisp plain-weave silk that announces itself before it is seen—a textile whose characteristic rustle makes it as much aural as visual.
The sound comes from its construction: high thread count, flat non-textured surface, finished under heat and pressure for stiffness. The word comes from Persian taftah, meaning twisted.
In the nineteenth century, the rustle of a taffeta skirt was a marker of feminine presence—an erotic signal that drew attention to movement and made the wearer audible before visible.
Taffeta is difficult to work with: stiff, prone to water-spotting, crushable beyond repair. Yet for evening gowns and bridal wear, when a garment must hold a shape softer fabrics cannot sustain, taffeta is irreplaceable.


