This site uses cookies. Learn more
PL EN RU
  • Products
    Fabrics
    Trimmings
    Carpets
    Wallpapers
    Leather
    Nails and buttons
    Strips
    Threads
    Eyelets
    Collections
    • RUSTIQ
      VELUTTO
      DUSTY
    • PRATO
      FICELLE
      HARMONY
    • FLORALS
      COMO
      TRENZA
    • BREVE
      BUFFO
      ECLIPSE
    • MOLLIS FR
      VERNISSAGE
      LEATHER CRAFT II
  • Partners
  • About us
    • About us
    • History
    • News
    • Arts and culture
    • Our Christmas card with seeds
      21.12.2020
      Our Christmas card with seeds
      Solaris at Mleko Studio
      26.11.2020
      Solaris at Mleko Studio
    • KNOWLEDGE 

      SHARING

  • Trends
    • Trends
    • TRENDS

       
      Trends in fabric design do not change as quickly as they used to. The real excitement is hidden beneath the level of patterns and colours.

      read more


    • Long-term decisions
      26.11.2020
      Long-term decisions
      Heimtextil 2020/21 trends are they still valid?
      29.10.2020
      Heimtextil 2020/21 trends are they still valid?
    • Inspirations
    • Carpets
      Carpets
      Panels
      Panels
    • Blog
    • FUROSHIKI  THE MOST FAMOUS BUNDLE IN THE WORLD
      22.12.2020
      FUROSHIKI THE MOST FAMOUS BUNDLE IN THE WORLD
      ALL THAT GLITTERS IS NOT GOLD
      15.12.2020
      ALL THAT GLITTERS IS NOT GOLD
  • Tips
  • Careers
  • Contact
  • Favorites
  • Wish List
  • Search
  • Log in
  • Partner’s area
  • Customer Area
    • Partner’s area
    • Log in
/ MAGICAL WORLD OF SHIBORI

MAGICAL WORLD OF SHIBORI

03.04.2017
+ Favorites

Shibori techniques

The word shiboru means wring out, squeeze, doing justice to the nature of the technique in which the cloth is prepared for dyeing in many different ways: by folding, stitching, pleating, sewing, twisting or binding. The elaborate process of shaping the cloth resembles the Japanese art of folding paper called origami or wrapping objects in cloth, known as furoshiki.

Small objects such as stones, wooden or glass balls, nuts or sticks can be used to create patterns. All these elements prevent parts of the cloth from soaking up the dye, thus creating stunning decoration. Some are ordered and geometric, others resemble flowers, ice crystals or waves, revealing painterly freedom of expression. The illusion of three dimensions they create is absolutely out of the ordinary. It has been an inspiration for many fashion designers like Issey Miyake or Yōji Yamamoto.

To some extent the end result of the shibori technique is always a surprise, which makes it truly magical. Never can the author predict what the result of their work will be. After the cloth has been prepared for dyeing it is immersed in an indigo dyebath but the colour is always a surprise, which is why it is so unique. The colours and patterns are different each time. Laboriousness and the use of indigo make shibori an expensive and difficult technique of decorating fabrics.

Indigo – a fascinating colour

The intensive blue colour is very characteristic of shibori. It is obtained from a natural dye that has been known for ages, indigo. Being an organic compound, indigo might be found in the leaves of plants like Indigoferia tinctoria, Polygonum aviculare, and Isatis tinctoria. Peoples’ fascination with this beautiful colour, symbolising the heavens, space, and freedom, has led to dramatic events and stirred powerful emotions. The history of indigo trade is the history of fortunes being made and lost, bankruptcies, conflicts, and sudden deaths. In the 16th century indigo was sourced from India and in the 18th century it began to be imported from Asia. In the 19th century, its chemical structure was discovered and the dye was synthesized.

The shibori cloths exhibited at Dekoma have been dyed with the use of a blue dye extracted from Indigoferia tinctoria.

About the author

Katarzyna Schmidt – Przewoźna, PhD


Fabric designer and exhibition planner, she graduated with honours from the University of Fine Arts in Poznań, where she studied interior design and textiles. For 12 years she has been the artistic director of Cepelia, where she created numerous well-known fabric collections. She is the founder of the “Natural Art” Natural Dyeing Laboratory at the Institute of Natural Fibres and Medicinal Plants. She is the author and co-author of around 100 papers on natural dyeing, fabrics, art, and handicraft. By organizing workshops, she promotes traditional and her own technological methods of dyeing. She is also a lecturer at the School of Form in Poznań.

Learn more:

Yoshiko Iwamoto Wada, Mary Kellogg Rice, Jane Barton. Shibori:

The Inventive Art of Japanese Shaped Resist Dyeing, Kodansha International, 1983
Janis Gunner, Shibori For Textile Artists, Pavilion Books, 2006

More blog entries

FUROSHIKI THE MOST FAMOUS BUNDLE IN THE WORLD

FUROSHIKI  THE MOST FAMOUS BUNDLE IN THE WORLD
The word furoshiki is inseparably associated with Japan and its culture. For hundreds of years, these picturesque pieces of cloth have accompanied the Japanese in
More

ALL THAT GLITTERS IS NOT GOLD

ALL THAT GLITTERS IS NOT GOLD
Christmas, the end of the year and the upcoming carnival season always bring an overwhelming need for lustre and light.
More

CHECK, HOUNDSTOOTH, PAISLEY - PART TWO

CHECK, HOUNDSTOOTH, PAISLEY - PART TWO
It has several patterns, many names and an interesting history. Tilted plaid, houndstooth or chicken's foot. The term pepita, which is used only in Poland,
More

CHECK, HOUNDSTOOTH, PAISLEY

CHECK, HOUNDSTOOTH, PAISLEY
Current design trends allow for much more variety than before. The eclectic style of interior design encourages us to combine different patterns and arrange them
More

GENTLE TOUCH OF AUTUMN

GENTLE TOUCH OF AUTUMN
The turn of summer and autumn is the time when we react emotionally to abrupt changes in atmospheric conditions, the first chill after hot summer
More

THE SUMMER TOUCH OF LUXURY

THE SUMMER TOUCH OF LUXURY
Silk fabrics require special handling as well as great respect. This is not only because they are expensive and difficult to maintain but mostly due
More

LET EVERYTHING BLOOM

LET EVERYTHING BLOOM
Interiors, just like us, love flowers. Modern times, with their fascination with the world of nature and the desire to save the planet in the
More

WITH A JEWELLER'S PRECISION

WITH A JEWELLER'S PRECISION
The word meaning “trimmings” in Polish (i.e. “pasmanteria”) comes from the French word “passement”, which means tape, trimming. When it comes to the textile industry,
More

GENUINELY PURE AND UNDOUBTEDLY NATURAL.

GENUINELY PURE AND UNDOUBTEDLY NATURAL.
Wool is one of the oldest raw materials used by man. Being 100% natural, it still remains impossible to counterfeit in laboratory conditions despite decades-long
More

As soft as velvet. As cuddly as a plush teddy bear.

As soft as velvet. As cuddly as a plush teddy bear.
Velvet, also called velour, plush or velveteen, is a fabric associated with elegance and luxury. Being soft and extremely pleasant to the touch, velvet endows
More

BACK TO THE ROOTS

BACK TO THE ROOTS
There is no matter more graceful and more sensitive to the touch than a good quality fabric. Thanks to its malleable nature it can fit
More

TO LOVE CHIAROSCURO

TO LOVE CHIAROSCURO
Today, in the age of slow life and slow food, every meal is an event in its own right. Setting the table is a ceremony
More

TASTY DECORATION

TASTY DECORATION
Today, in the age of slow life and slow food, every meal is an event in its own right. Setting the table is a ceremony
More

SUMMER IN STRIPES.

SUMMER IN STRIPES.
Summer is the time when we long for moving our entire lives outdoors. We are drawn to the garden, near the water, to the beach
More

The fabric goes out on the street

The fabric goes out on the street
Participants of Malta Festival 2017 could not only admire, but also enter the fabric labyrinth located in Malta Generator in Plac Wolności. The installation
More

MAGICAL WORLD OF SHIBORI

MAGICAL WORLD OF SHIBORI
The word shiboru means wring out, squeeze, doing justice to the nature of the technique in which the cloth is prepared for dyeing in many
More
Partners
Alcantara
Agena
Koninck
Penelopeoggi
Moon
Cotting
Lignepure

Dekoma's partners offer 2186 products including: 1009 textile products, 400 wallpapers and 707 natural leathers.

Subscribe to our newsletter
To unsubscribe click here
podane adresy e-mail są niezgodne!
 
Showroom / Office

DEKOMA Sp. z o.o.
ul. Pszczelna 3, Zalasewo
62-020 Swarzędz
NIP: 777-25-16-492

+48 61 817 31 44

Our hotline is available weekdays from 8:00 to 16:00.

e-mail us

Office: office@dekoma.eu
Orders: orders@dekoma.eu

social media


Copyright © 2021 Dekoma Sp z o.o.
  • Terms and conditions
  • Privacy policy
  • Complaints
  • Partners
  • Newsletter

Favorites

Added to Favorites

Favorites
Wish List

Added to Wish List

Wish List
 

dodano próbkę do koszyka.

 
przeglądaj dalej
przejdź do koszyka
koszyk

do koszyka można dodać maksymalnie 5 próbek

nie możesz zamówić próbek. prawdopodobnie twoje poprzednie zamówienie nie zostało jeszcze zrealizowane.

chcąc otrzymać więcej niż 5 próbek prosimy o kontakt z naszym działem handlowym

Newsletter
Thank you for subscribing to our newsletter. To confirm your subscription, please check your e-mail.
Access denied

Your current authorisation level does not allow us to process this request. Please contact customer support.

Complete your profile

Complete the Tax Identification Number in your profile

kliknij tutaj aby przejść do edycji profilu

lub kliknij tutaj jeśli nie jesteś klientem dekoma