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Friday, January 30, 2009 2:02:47 PM
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Seeing the Bigger Picture – Putting the Potential Value of “Spider Silk” Technology into Perspective
While naturally produced spider silk has long been understood to have a superior level of tensile strength, research institutions and companies alike are seemingly on the verge of attaining the ability to harness this technology and apply it to various fields of endeavor. Sure, the idea of using such spider silk to swing from one building to another might be attractive to a certain comic book superhero fan club. In reality, however, the utility of this “packaged spider silk” could virtually spread across multiple, disparate applications in both governmental and commercial sectors. This concept of application versatility truly showcases this technology’s remarkable value for growth in the not-so-distant future.
Take Velcro back in the 1940’s, for example. This “zipperless zipper” idea came to a Swiss engineer named George de Mestra after witnessing seeds continually latching onto his clothes and his dog’s fur. In time, NASA was using it onboard their shuttles in both astronaut spacesuits and on-the-wall supply fasteners. After soon being incorporated in an array of leisure applications including skiing, surfing, and SCUBA, it further became utilized in nuclear power plants, automobiles, army tanks, combat uniforms, and footwear.
A packaged spider silk product would represent the same universal applicability as Velcro, thereby covering a vast array of commercialization areas. In terms of government utility, this spider silk can be used in ballistic armor and cables on board aircraft carriers. In terms of health-based utility, this material can be used in the creation of artificial ligaments or tendons as well as in the improvement of bandages and surgical thread. Further utility is foreseeable in the production of a number of commercial applications including lightweight clothing, fishing lines, seat belts, high strength cables, parachutes, biodegradable bottles, just to name a few.
Qualitystocks has identified the major players in this emerging industry which includes smaller companies represented by Kraig Biocraft Laboratories Inc (KBLB.OB), Angiotech International, Nexia Biotechnologies, and Oxford Biomaterials as well as the chemical giant, Dupont. Government organizations, consisting of the US Army, US Air Force, and the National Science Foundation, have also been actively funding spider silk research programs including Tufts University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and the University of California at Santa Barbara.
While naturally produced spider silk has long been understood to have a superior level of tensile strength, research institutions and companies alike are seemingly on the verge of attaining the ability to harness this technology and apply it to various fields of endeavor. Sure, the idea of using such spider silk to swing from one building to another might be attractive to a certain comic book superhero fan club. In reality, however, the utility of this “packaged spider silk” could virtually spread across multiple, disparate applications in both governmental and commercial sectors. This concept of application versatility truly showcases this technology’s remarkable value for growth in the not-so-distant future.
Take Velcro back in the 1940’s, for example. This “zipperless zipper” idea came to a Swiss engineer named George de Mestra after witnessing seeds continually latching onto his clothes and his dog’s fur. In time, NASA was using it onboard their shuttles in both astronaut spacesuits and on-the-wall supply fasteners. After soon being incorporated in an array of leisure applications including skiing, surfing, and SCUBA, it further became utilized in nuclear power plants, automobiles, army tanks, combat uniforms, and footwear.
A packaged spider silk product would represent the same universal applicability as Velcro, thereby covering a vast array of commercialization areas. In terms of government utility, this spider silk can be used in ballistic armor and cables on board aircraft carriers. In terms of health-based utility, this material can be used in the creation of artificial ligaments or tendons as well as in the improvement of bandages and surgical thread. Further utility is foreseeable in the production of a number of commercial applications including lightweight clothing, fishing lines, seat belts, high strength cables, parachutes, biodegradable bottles, just to name a few.
Qualitystocks has identified the major players in this emerging industry which includes smaller companies represented by Kraig Biocraft Laboratories Inc (KBLB.OB), Angiotech International, Nexia Biotechnologies, and Oxford Biomaterials as well as the chemical giant, Dupont. Government organizations, consisting of the US Army, US Air Force, and the National Science Foundation, have also been actively funding spider silk research programs including Tufts University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and the University of California at Santa Barbara.
Recent KBLB News
- Kraig Biocraft Laboratories Smashes Production Targets as New Spider Silk Batch Surges Past Expectations • GlobeNewswire Inc. • 05/26/2026 11:35:00 AM
- Form 424B3 - Prospectus [Rule 424(b)(3)] • Edgar (US Regulatory) • 05/22/2026 08:30:20 PM
- Form 424B3 - Prospectus [Rule 424(b)(3)] • Edgar (US Regulatory) • 05/22/2026 08:30:19 PM
- Kraig Biocraft Laboratories Highlights Technical Breakthrough of Its Immortalized Silk Gland Cell Platform • GlobeNewswire Inc. • 05/20/2026 11:35:00 AM
- Immortalized Silk Gland Cell Line Breakthrough Expands Kraig Biocraft’s Biotech Ambitions (KBLB) • IH Market News • 05/18/2026 03:12:33 PM
- Kraig Biocraft Laboratories Announces Breakthrough Creation of Immortalized Silkworm Silk Gland Cell Line with Broad Biotechnology Applications • GlobeNewswire Inc. • 05/18/2026 11:05:00 AM
- Form 10-Q - Quarterly report [Sections 13 or 15(d)] • Edgar (US Regulatory) • 05/14/2026 08:31:50 PM
- Form 424B3 - Prospectus [Rule 424(b)(3)] • Edgar (US Regulatory) • 05/14/2026 12:14:08 PM
- Form EFFECT - Notice of Effectiveness • Edgar (US Regulatory) • 05/14/2026 04:15:05 AM
- The Plastic Crisis Is Exploding and Kraig Biocraft Laboratories Has a Unique Answer • GlobeNewswire Inc. • 05/13/2026 01:05:00 PM
- Form POS AM - Post-Effective amendments for registration statement • Edgar (US Regulatory) • 05/11/2026 08:30:47 PM
- Kraig Biocraft Laboratories Commissions New Production Rearing Center to Support Accelerating Spider Silk Scale-Up • GlobeNewswire Inc. • 05/11/2026 11:05:00 AM
- Kraig Biocraft Laboratories Positions Itself as a Front-Runner in Spider Silk Race • GlobeNewswire Inc. • 05/07/2026 01:05:00 PM
- Kraig Biocraft Laboratories Launches April/May Production Cycle Following Record Spider Silk Output • GlobeNewswire Inc. • 05/04/2026 11:05:00 AM
- Form 424B3 - Prospectus [Rule 424(b)(3)] • Edgar (US Regulatory) • 04/30/2026 09:07:15 PM
- Kraig Biocraft (KBLB) Spider Silk Production Milestone Signals Progress Toward Commercialization • IH Market News • 04/30/2026 02:54:26 PM
- Kraig Labs Clears Dual Commercialization Milestones with Record Spider Silk Production and Successful Reeling Operations • GlobeNewswire Inc. • 04/30/2026 01:20:00 PM
- Kraig Biocraft (USOTC:KBLB) Hits 50% Production Milestone — Spider Silk Push Moves Closer to Commercial Scale • IH Market News • 04/28/2026 01:51:39 PM
- Kraig Biocraft Laboratories Reports Major Progress Converting Record-Setting Spider Silk Cocoon Production into Reeled Silk • GlobeNewswire Inc. • 04/28/2026 11:05:00 AM
- Form POS AM - Post-Effective amendments for registration statement • Edgar (US Regulatory) • 04/21/2026 06:41:52 PM
- Kraig Biocraft Laboratories Advances Record Production and Begins Processing 1.8 Metric Tons of Recombinant Spider Silk Cocoons • GlobeNewswire Inc. • 04/20/2026 11:05:00 AM
- The End of Performance at Any Cost, as Spider Silk Points to a Cleaner Future • GlobeNewswire Inc. • 04/15/2026 01:15:00 PM

