The silk weaving technique is a traditional craft and technology that uses tussah silk as raw material, and processes the silk into splitting, sizing, winding, sizing, weaving, moistening and flattening. Cocoon silk is processed by tension-free wooden looms and natural additives. The finished silk thread remains cylindrical, and the silk surface presents a unique texture. It is both hard and soft, and warm in winter and cool in summer. Commonly used raw materials for tussah silk include gray silk (tussah silk), medicinal silk, water-reeled silk, and large silk. After the warp and weft threads are made, silk can be woven on a sling loom. The loom craftsman sits upright on the wooden loom base, holds the shuttle in his right hand, holds it flat, hooks the shuttle tip with his index finger, steps on the twist with his right foot, pushes the heald frame forward with his left hand, and sticks to the heald; when the mouth is at its largest, he throws the shuttle close to the shaft, takes the shuttle with his left hand, and then takes the heald frame with his right hand, presses down, pushes forward, steps on the twist with his left foot, and presses down again, and repeats the operation. During the shuttle throwing process, the combined force of the shuttle throwing is relatively large. The wooden loom itself is relatively light, so heavy stones are needed on both sides to stabilize the wooden loom. After weaving the silk, the silk needs to be trained, moistened, and flattened.