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Indigo Katazome Adventures, Pt 3: Soymilk
This post is part III of a series of posts on learning about dyeing katazome with indigo. It’s the last post for now, until I can dye with indigo again in the spring and summer. It’s common with indigo katazome to brush soymilk on after laying down paste. This does two things: it strengthens the Read more
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Indigo Adventures, Pt 2: Sizing
Last fall, I did some preliminary trials with different types of fabric pretreatments – soy, funori, and konjac. Konjac, a root vegetable, comes from the Okinawan tradition. Funori, a seaweed, is a very common pretreatment for fabric in katazome and its sister, sodum alginate, is often used for pretreatment and thickening in procion mx dye. Read more
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Indigo Adventures, Pt 1: Double Sided vs Single Sided Indigo Katazome
Since the weather has gotten warmer and drier, I’ve had the opportunity to do further experiments on the best processes for double sided indigo. I based my experiments on traditional processes found in a book I really enjoy, 日本の手わざ 長板中形, and conversations with my friend Skye at https://www.instagram.com/indigoblueskye/. Understand that these are not my best Read more
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Fresh Indigo Surizome
My indigo crop is blooming early this year, so I decided to try some new techniques to salvage the harvest. I did a lot of trials of different types of stencil dyeing, and I have some still in the works, but I thought I’d share what worked so far. I’ve done a lot of surizome Read more
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Chayazome Katabira
Recreating Momoyama Era Stencil Resist Dyeing Introduction Chayazome is a unique form of Momoyama Era (1568-1600) stencil resist technology where both sides of the fabric are resisted with rice paste and then dipped into an indigo vat. The result is a clear white pattern against a blue background, with a fabric that looks the same Read more
