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Showing posts with label Cultural Textiles: Japan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cultural Textiles: Japan. Show all posts

Kit Eastman




I am a textile artist from St. Paul, Minnesota. I make both functional and art textiles, hand painted in the Japanese tradition of katazome (paste resist stencil dyeing), using a palette of natural pigments and dyes on linen, cotton, silk and sometimes paper. My work celebrates daily meetings with the wild birds, plants, and lake breezes of my local urban surroundings.

My decorative and functional works (i.e. pillows and runners) are created in small batches, and each item is a unique variation of my original design. I also create one-of-a kind katazome works for the wall. In addition, I am open to custom commission work. For example, I can work with homeowners and/or interior designers who want to decorate a home or public space with a unique, nature-inspired art textile.

Katazome techniques can be applied to any natural fiber woven fabric, from sheer silks to heavier weight wools, linens, hemps and cottons. Please contact me if you are interested in learning more about what is possible!



Artist statement:  Natural forms draw me in on daily walks around the small lake near my home. I am captivated by the patterns and cycles I observe in plants, water, birds and seasons. These familiar landscapes, as well as the interior terrain of thought, memory and imagination inspire my work.

Since January of 2009, I have focused exclusively on the materials, tools and techniques of katazome, which inspire me almost as much as my subject matter! The centuries-old technique incorporates elements of both printmaking and painting, and relies on simple non-toxic materials such as rice paste resist, natural pigments and dyes, and soymilk. It is an elegant process with relevance for the contemporary artist who strives to work with a minimum impact on the environment.

As my work enters the stream of daily life, those who use and enjoy it will be reminded of the beauty of nature. In sharing with my audience how the work was made, I hope to inspire appreciation of this inventive, robust, and earth-friendly Japanese textile tradition.


Location:  St. Paul, Minnesota, USA
Online shop:  SilverMinnow
Blog:  kiteastman
Memberships:
   Surface Design Association
   Textile Center of Minnesota
   American Crafts Council
Languages spoken:  English


Katazome textile by Kit Eastman















Tags:  natural dye, hand painted, linen, silk, katazome, Japanese, bird, plant, home decor, stencil

kimonoboy




My internet-only shop sells Japanese homespun indigo cotton and hemp folk textiles from the mid 1800's to the mid 1900's with an emphasis on boro futon covers, noragi (peasant & farmer’s clothing) and kaya (hemp) mosquito netting.

Questions about old Japanese cotton or hemp textiles are most welcome and I will respond to them the best I can.

I’ve lived in Japan for 14 years and I am very fortunate to be married to Akiko. We live in Fukuoka (Kyushu, Western Japan)  with our very ornery wire haired fox terrier, Hanako.  Please see my site for the details about our life in Japan.

Jim Austin
Fukuoka-shi, Japan


Mission:  We wish to provide an internet presence where people from anywhere in the world can acquire exceptional early Japanese folk textiles directly from us in Japan.




Location:  Fukuoka-shi, Japan
Online shop:  kimonoboy
Languages spoken:  English, Japanese, Spanish, Portuguese



 Japanese Vintage Boro Textile from kimonoboy





Tags:    Japanese folk textiles, boro, komebukuro, kaya, hemp mosquito netting,  indigo, kasuri, katazome, sakiori, indigo cotton

Nejiribana - spiralling flower designs




I create one of a kind hand embroideries using kimono silk and flat silk thread.  Pieces can take anything from 30 or so hours to over 300 (embroidery time) to complete.

I am a graduate authorised tutor of the Japanese Embroidery Center, Atlanta (the only centre for JE outside Japan) and am currently their only teacher in the NW of England.  I am enjoying bringing Japanese embroidery to a new generation of embroiderers in the UK.  I also sell vintage Japanese fabric in my Etsy shop.

I have only just started exhibiting my work here in the UK - I hope that joining TAFA will bring my work to a wider audience.


Artist's Statement:  I consider myself to be both artist and craftswoman.

All my pieces are created by hand following the way of NUIDO and its three aspects: the acquisition of technical skills and knowledge, the development of artistic sensitivity and awareness, and understanding the spiritual aspects of shishu.

I will always consider myself to be a student of 'nuido' - the way of embroidery, I aim to continue to develop and improve my skills and knowledge as long as I am able to embroider.

"The hands are the exit of the spirit."
- Master Iwao Saito


Location: Lancashire, United Kingdom
Online shop: nejiribana
Languages spoken: English




"Yo-yo San", Japanese Embroidery by Jane Smith

















Tags: embroidery, Japan, silk, kimono, art, design, retail, handmade



MegWeaves



I am a self-taught handweaver in Nelson, New Zealand. 

I grew up watching my mother knit, sew and embroider lovely things for me, all the while being told the one thing she longed to do was to weave. So I came to think of weaving as the ultimate craft. She started weaving when she was 60.  I had a few false starts, but hunkered down and got serious in 2004, when I left my last job and realized nobody was expecting me to turn up at the office the next morning.   

People I know, the things they make, the stories they tell, and the places I lived (Yokohama, Japan, Minneapolis, and Auckland, New Zealand) inform my work.  I, in return, make cloth that bring back those memories and experiences.  In doing so, I like to use New Zealand merino when I can as texture/hand is of utmost importance in my work, particularly items that wrap your face and neck.  But I also enjoy being a citizen of Plant Earth and am open to any fiber of great texture. I weave with cashmere from Inner Mongolia and cotton from Italy and Korea as well.

Currently I weave mainly scarves and shawls, but I hope to also weave yardage, as well as to make objets d’art.
-Meg Nakagawa



Location: Nelson, New Zealand
Blogs:
   MegWeaves
   Kirehashi
(Japanese)
   JP.MegWeaves (website in Japanese)
Languages spoken: English, Japanese




Handwoven scarf by Meg Nakagawa











Tags: New Zealand, Japan, Minnesota, weaving, shawls, scarves, exhibition, commission,  yardage  

Sri


Boro Yogi (Sleeping Kimono)
ca. late nineteenth century, indigo dyed cottons
Sri, Brooklyn, NY


Sri is a by-appointment textile gallery specializing in antique Japanese folk textiles, highlighting the indigo-dyed cotton utilitarian fabrics and boro--or patched and mended--textiles of old Japan as well as a wide selection of rural Japan's hand-plied bast fiber textiles.  We also stock limited collections of Indian folk textiles and Korean pojagi.



Location:  Brooklyn, New York, USA 
Online store: Sri Threads  
Brick and mortar presence:   
     18 Eckford Street, #8, Brooklyn, NY 11222  
Blog:  Sri Threads  
Languages spoken:  English, Spanish

Girl's Silk Under-Kimono (Juban)
ca. late nineteenth century 
itajime/kyokechi and shibori dyed silks
Sri, Brooklyn, NY
 Sri, Brooklyn, New York, USA









Tags: Japanese folk textiles, boro, shibori, Mingei, indigo, kasuri, katazome, kimono, tsutsugaki, sakiori

HeART of Healing Gallery


 

 

HeART of Healing Gallery is the art component of the Integrative Medicine of Kentucky, owned by fiber artist and healer, Dr. Christi Bonds Garrett. Christi has a special interest (and huge collection!) of Kuna molas and vintage kimono.  She is especially drawn to fiber art and textiles that make reference to the healing arts, thus many of her molas depict images of curative plants, medicine men and women, and scenes where patients are being healed.

Mission: to incorporate the arts into the healing process.

Christi is a member of the Paducah Fiber Artists.  Her quilts often make reference to Chinese or Native American medicine.

Location: Paducah, Kentucky (USA)
Online Stores: Etsy
Brick and Mortar: booth at 212 Broadway in Paducah
Blogs: HeART of Healing Gallery
Languages: English


Mola: Medicine Men Playing Flutes






Tags: kuna mola, kimono, applique, hilltribe, art quilt, miao, native american, chinese, herbs, shaman

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