Kitobi Sahehi Buhori Skachat
Binding material to produce a pattern In principle, shibori tie-dye involves immersing cloth into a dye liquor to color it. Shibori’s delicate patterns are expressed by leaving certain areas in the original color, often referred to as “white”, undyed or resist dyed.
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In other words, the beauty of a competed shibori pattern will be decided by how to keep some parts “white.” The most typical way to make the pattern leaving “white” is to bind the cloth with thread so that the dye liquor doesn’t reach certain parts. However, of course, this simple method alone is insufficient for creating the elaborate shibori patterns.
During its long history, experienced and knowledgeable craftspeople contrived a variety of methods for creating different patterns. There is a certain beauty only shibori tie-dye can depict that other fabric decoration methods such as painting and tracing cannot. Elaborate and honed shibori techniques have been devised over generations, and passed down to today.
Release binding to unfurl the design Shirome (cloth with bindings before dyeing) The area to be kept white (undyed part) is bound with thread and is called 'shirome,' or “white of the eye”. Every “shirome” bind is made firmly by the hand of experienced craftspeople one by one, which never allows the dye liquor to pass through.
There is no painting directly on the cloth or added colors into the layer of cloth - Shibori is such a unique technique in which craftspeople focus most of their concentration on creating “undyed” areas. Different methods of making shirome. One kind of shirome represents large waves and the other represents water’s surface. Unbinding and Steaming There are some binding techniques requiring extreme fingertip dexterity to manually produce individual beads of shirome. Sometimes a craftsperson patiently makes extraordinary numbers of shirome reaching well beyond 100,000 bindings only on one cloth taking several years to complete. Ito-toki or unbinding is the process of removing all the thread from the cloth. They pull the cloth quickly and firmly but not so much as to cause damage to the cloth; a process requiring constant delicate power adjustments.
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