1: Collect male and female silk moths as we do now. No change necessary its perfect.
2: Silkmoths mate and create eggs. Statistics claim 5-10 eggs and i have personally seen up to 12 eggs from one pair but extremely rare. In real life a female silkmoth can lay up to 500 eggs which would be crazy in a game. I think a small increase in eggs laid would be nice. Maybe around 10-15 eggs. This is not a much needed change but would be nice.
3: Then we come to filling herbalist tables with eggs so they can hatch. This step also needs no changing.
4: This is the step that I would liked reworked the most. Now its time to move all of our hatched worms into cupboards full of leaves. I never liked this part and its always seemed weird. So time to take some advice from real life silk farmers. Basically the silk worms are placed onto racks with what i like to call pizza trays and there they eat leaves. It would be awesome to see wooden racks made that would accept silkworm trays just like cheese racks do. Each tray would have space for possibly 16 worms and the rack would take 4-6 trays. I was thinking that maybe the racks or trays themselves had to get loaded with leaves much like a tree planters pot is loaded with dirt. A tool tip would display how many leaves are inside a tray or the whole rack. Once all the worms turn into cocoons you would right click on the rack and click collect to get all the trays in your inventory. Then you would right click on each tray to collect the cocoons. Or you could just right click the rack to collect all the cocoons while the trays stay inside the rack.


5: Now you got cocoons which could do with a color change to white but not that important.
6: Now we unravel the cocoons or leave them to hatch into silk moths. This step needs no change. The silk filaments we get from unraveling could use a small rework. If you have a decent silk operation you will get a crap ton of silk filaments which sucks cause they don't stack. I believe silk filaments should stack in 10 or more but 10 would be perfect.
Silk thread and silk cloth processes are perfectly fine and need no change.