This is …
… genius!
Here’s the original start to a “piece”. As far as I know, it only became “post cards”, of which I have several.
This is …
… genius!
Here’s the original start to a “piece”. As far as I know, it only became “post cards”, of which I have several.
I have been making quilts for over 20 years, but have never seen anything like Japanese Shibori. Shibori takes tie dye to another level. Cotton shibori is the best, as silk shibori turns out to be rather flat, whereas cotton Shibori, has a texture that rises and falls. I have used it to add depth to my quilts.
It is said that a bolt of Shibori takes a year to tie, and a year to un-tie.
It is made with with silk ties, and is dipped into shades of color the lightest being the first. Upon first glance Shibori looks like a lacey affair—that I don’t have much taste for, but suddenly it became an obsession. In fact, on cheap pieces of fabric, the Shibori dots are printed on.
This fabric, as seen above, was made first with white, then lavender, and finally green.
No one makes Japanese Shibori anymore—it is considered idle work. Kasuri dyworks in Berkley was, at one point, striving to carry all types of Japanese cloth, has moved, and we all miss it. They do major fabric shows, but I haven’t seen this type of Shibori in years. My favorite Shibori depicts animals—a horse, a hawk.
Occasionally a piece will come up on Ebay, but it’s rare, and lifeless.
–Sarah
Adire, which means tie and dye, is the general name for the type of cloth used on the majority of borders on these quilts—Adire Eleko is more specific as the cloth was painted with a resist (cassava starch) by hand rather than tied—then immersed in an indigo vat, and finally boiled in order to scrape the starch and reveal the designs.
The sections that were painted with the starch remained white—the rest indigo, but after multiple washings, the indigo runs into the white and the white areas became a paler blue. (Or occasionally the piece was dipped again in a lighter indigo to achieve that pale blue.) If you take into consideration that paste was painted on as a resist, the respect for the deep shades or lines deepens as well; painting in reverse is an art in itself.
My favorite type of Adire is called Ibadandun, and was made in Ibadan, and means “Ibadan is sweet,” or has come to mean that. I love it for it’s variety of motifs—pillars (which symbolize Mapo Hall in Ibadan; the greater number of spoons within the pillars, the better the cloth) ducks, chickens—frogs, eggs and more. The starch was painted on by women—and girls who learned the trade from their mothers, but the production of the cloth has almost entirely ceased since the 70’s for a variety of reasons.
Therefore, these pieces are extremely rare, (they were not collected nor saved as other African cloths were—) and although they have not earned the amount of respect that Kuba or Kente has—it is only a matter of time before they do, assuming that any at all can be found.
The decision to cut into these cloths was not made lightly.
–Sarah