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7809:1980s Mud-Dyed Japanese Silk Doro-Ohshima Tsumugi, 60in. AraiHari

7809:Mud Ohshima Tsumugi middle

Catalog# 7809

1980s  Rare Japanese Textiles:

Doro (Mud-dyed) Ohshima Tsumugi
(pongee) Silk Fabric
Komon (Small Elements) in Checkerboard Arrangement

 Width: 14.25 inches / 36.83 cm
Length: 60 inches / 152.4 cm

US$18.00 per piece
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Item Details and Description

Fabric History/Pedigree: 1980s lightweight doro ohshima tsumugi (mud-dyed) fabric from kimono pieces  from an Arai Hari (special Japanese kimono cleaner -- see info on Arai-Hari HERE from John Marshall, expert on Japanese textiles .

Fabric Description Details:

This thin, lightweight  piece is a checkerboard sort of arrangement using very dark-brown with lighter brown and tans; fabric and is slightly translucent; The checkerboard style design's elements are all about 1/4 inch / 6.35mm square; fabric is the same on both sides; Selvedge on both sides is about 3/8inch / 9.53mm; Kimonos made from Doro-Ohshima Tsumugi are held in high regard among kimono traditionalists in Japan, given that the Imperial family has been known to wear such fabric in Royal kimonos.

Colors: Please use our text color descriptions to complement your sense of the fabric due to differences in contrast and color on different devices.

BACKGROUND JAPANESE TEXTILES CULTURAL NOTES: 

There are various types of older Ohshima Tsumugi silk that involve tsumugi using mud, indigo, and grass or plants in the dyeing process. 

To learn about the older Ohshima textiles, there are details on that aspect of Japan's special pongee silk-making process which can be found on the National Foundation for Promoting the National Costume of Japan website. The site explains the natural plant dyes and mud  etc. used in making older (1960s and earlier) Ohshima Tsumugi silks, quoted here:

Characteristics: A plain woven silk fabric with pre-dyed scoured threads both for warp and weft. The color is refined and calm and the fabric is soft and difficult to wrinkle. Threads are dyed with plant dyes such as "Techiki" (Raphilolepis umbellata) and indigo (Persicaria tinctoria) with a technique, peculiar only to "Oshima Tsumugi," called "Ori Jime." As a variety, an additional treatment is made to the dyed thread by dipping them in muddy water. It is "Doro(mud) Zome(dyeing)." There are several kinds of "Oshima Tsumugi":"Doro Oshima," "Ai(indigo) Oshima," "Doro Ai Oshima," "Iro(color) Oshima" and "Natsu(summer) Oshima."
$ 18.00

7809:1980s Mud-Dyed Japanese Silk Doro-Ohshima Tsumugi, 60in. AraiHari