Silk Viscose Fabric Supplier — Wholesale Blends

DreamSilk produces silk viscose blend fabric. Viscose (rayon) adds softness, color depth, and affordability to silk. The most common application: silk viscose velvet, where silk forms the base and viscose creates the plush pile.

Wholesale by the meter. Custom dyeing. OEKO-TEX® certified. Free samples.

SPECIFICATIONS

TypeBlend RatioWeightWidthCharacterCommon Uses
Silk Viscose Velvet18% Silk / 82% Viscose180–200 GSM114 / 140 cmPlush pile, lustrousApparel, dresses, upholstery, scarves
Viscose Raw Silk30–50% Silk / 50–70% Viscose80–120 GSM114 / 140 cmTextured, matte, affordableCasual garments, scarves
Silk Viscose Satin40–60% Silk / 40–60% Viscose90–130 GSM114 / 140 cmSoft sheen, fluid drapeDresses, blouses, linings


Silk Viscose Fabric by Type

Silk Viscose Color Options

Black silk viscose velvet fabric with plush pile texture

Black Silk Viscose

White silk viscose fabric showing soft blended surface

White Silk Viscose

Burgundy silk viscose velvet with deep saturated color

Burgundy Silk Viscose

Teal silk viscose fabric with rich jewel tone

Teal Silk Viscose

Navy silk viscose velvet close-up showing pile depth

Navy Silk Viscose

Emerald silk viscose fabric with vivid green tone

Emerald Silk Viscose

Champagne silk viscose fabric in warm neutral

Champagne Silk Viscose

Custom Pantone dyed silk viscose fabric sample

Custom Pantone Dyed

The Blend Behind Silk Velvet



Most silk velvet on the market is actually a silk-viscose blend — 18% silk base with 82% viscose pile. This is the standard construction used by manufacturers worldwide. The silk provides the structure and the viscose creates the plush surface. If you're sourcing "silk velvet," this is the fabric you're looking for.



Deep Color Absorption



Viscose absorbs dye more deeply than silk alone. This makes silk viscose blends produce some of the richest, most saturated colors among all silk-family fabrics. Jewel tones — burgundy, teal, emerald, navy — look particularly intense on silk viscose velvet.



Burnout (Devore) — Only Possible with This Blend



Burnout velvet requires a two-fiber blend. A chemical paste dissolves the viscose pile in selected areas while leaving the silk base intact. This creates the signature semi-transparent pattern effect. Pure silk velvet cannot be processed this way. If you want burnout velvet, silk viscose is the only option.


WHY WORK WITH DREAMSILK

We manufacture custom silk products and fabrics for brands in 50+ countries. From fabric selection to finished goods, everything is produced in our own facility - giving you one point of contact, consistent quality, and shorter lead times.

Certification

FAQ

Silk viscose fabric blends mulberry silk with viscose (regenerated cellulose fiber). The most common product is silk viscose velvet — silk base with viscose pile. Other types include viscose raw silk and silk viscose satin.



Yes, it contains real silk. The base fabric is silk (typically silk georgette or chiffon). The pile is viscose. The standard 18/82 blend is what the industry calls "silk velvet." Products labeled silk velvet are almost always this blend.



Viscose pile is softer, more lustrous, and absorbs dye better than silk pile. It also enables burnout (devore) processing — the viscose can be chemically dissolved while the silk base remains intact. And it keeps the cost practical for commercial production.



Stocked colors: 50 meters. Custom dyeing: 100–200m per color. Burnout velvet: 100m per design.



Dry clean recommended for silk viscose velvet. Hand wash cold for lighter blends. Do not tumble dry. The viscose component is sensitive to heat and agitation when wet.


Silk Viscose Fabric — Composition, Properties, and Uses

How Silk Viscose Velvet Is Constructed

Silk viscose velvet is woven on a double-cloth loom. The base is typically silk georgette or silk chiffon (18% of total weight). The pile — the soft, plush surface you touch — is 100% viscose (82% of total weight). Two layers are woven simultaneously with pile threads connecting them. The layers are then split apart and the pile is sheared to create an even surface.

Silk Viscose vs Silk Rayon

Viscose and rayon are often used interchangeably. Technically, viscose is a type of rayon. In fabric labeling, "silk rayon" and "silk viscose" refer to the same category of blends. When sourcing, focus on the specific fiber content (percentage) and construction rather than the name.

Care

  • Dry clean recommended for velvet. The pile can crush and matt if machine washed.
  • For non-velvet silk viscose blends: hand wash cold, air dry.
  • Store velvet hanging, not folded. Pile compression from folding can be difficult to reverse.
  • Steam to refresh — do not press a hot iron directly on velvet pile.

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