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Chinchilla fur

Posted By: Donnersurvivor

Chinchilla fur - 01/19/23 01:03 AM

Is there still a market or does anyone raise Chinchilla for fur anymore? I was scrolling Facebook and saw a old Chinchilla coat which is what made me wonder.
Posted By: AnthonyT

Re: Chinchilla fur - 01/19/23 01:05 AM

There is still a chinchilla breeders association and I have seen hides on the list for some of the larger fur auctions that deal in the ranch goods.
Posted By: beaverpeeler

Re: Chinchilla fur - 01/19/23 01:33 AM

I saw a bunch of chinchilla pelts at an FHA auction once when they used to hold them in Seattle. Probably been 12-15 years ago.
Posted By: Tatiana

Re: Chinchilla fur - 01/19/23 05:26 AM

Our tanneries process some chinchilla, and there are some local chinchilla breeders, but most of our chinchilla is imported from Wanger Furs in Hungary, and it isn't a very popular fur overall. However, at least here, fur coats made out of orylag rabbit are more common, and they're difficult to tell apart visually from real chinchilla. Quite a few people breed these rabbits, I've seen literal truckloads or rabbit skins unloaded at a local tannery. When ladies want something more expensive, they just buy sable or good mink with sable trim, as it is more recognizable and more difficult to mimic with cheaper materials (as a luxury item).
Posted By: waggler

Re: Chinchilla fur - 01/19/23 05:51 AM

Chinchilla is probably the least durable fur there is. However, it is unbelievably soft. If you close your eyes while at the same time lowering your hand down onto a Chinchilla pelt, you can't really sense when your hand touched the fur it is so soft.
Posted By: Donnersurvivor

Re: Chinchilla fur - 01/19/23 12:49 PM

Originally Posted by Tatiana
Our tanneries process some chinchilla, and there are some local chinchilla breeders, but most of our chinchilla is imported from Wanger Furs in Hungary, and it isn't a very popular fur overall. However, at least here, fur coats made out of orylag rabbit are more common, and they're difficult to tell apart visually from real chinchilla. Quite a few people breed these rabbits, I've seen literal truckloads or rabbit skins unloaded at a local tannery. When ladies want something more expensive, they just buy sable or good mink with sable trim, as it is more recognizable and more difficult to mimic with cheaper materials (as a luxury item).


Very interesting, thank you.
Posted By: Boco

Re: Chinchilla fur - 01/19/23 04:33 PM

Northern flying squirrel is remenicent of chinchilla in character,but not colour.
Posted By: Tatiana

Re: Chinchilla fur - 01/19/23 05:09 PM

Originally Posted by Boco
Northern flying squirrel is remenicent of chinchilla in character,but not colour.


Our flying squirrels have pretty blue-gray fur, very similar in color to chinchilla (so do our red squirrels in winter). Actually, I once had a couple of flying squirrels in a bundle of squirrles I took to the tannery. They came back with a tag saying "chinchilla" smile

[Linked Image]
Posted By: Trap Setter

Re: Chinchilla fur - 01/19/23 05:17 PM

Once saw a guy at a gas station in the Twin Cities whith chinchilla seat covers in a big Cadillac decked out with big rims and spinners and a fancy paint job. He also had a nice big brimmed hat and a flashy cane. Not sure his profession though whistle

I saw the fur and just had to ask what it was.
Posted By: Donnersurvivor

Re: Chinchilla fur - 01/19/23 05:22 PM

Originally Posted by Trap Setter
Once saw a guy at a gas station in the Twin Cities whith chinchilla seat covers in a big Cadillac decked out with big rims and spinners and a fancy paint job. He also had a nice big brimmed hat and a flashy cane. Not sure his profession though whistle


I wish you'd have gotten a picture!

I don't think we can harvest flying squirrels here, they do look beautiful
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