Living in a small mountain village just outside of Tokyo, I grow a crop of indigo every year and process the leaves into dye using traditional methods. I also breed silk moths, raise the silkworms and then reel/spin the silk from the cocoons. The silk is then dyed with natural dyes and finally woven on traditional Japanese looms. I run several ten-day live-in workshops a year at the old farmhouse here in Japan focusing on the Japanese use of indigo. Contact me for information.
Wednesday, 16 November 2011
Indigo Stalks Dye Sublime Grey on Silk.
After growing and dying with indigo for 19 years, you just about do everything possible with the stuff. But boiling the stems after stripping off the indigo pigment laden leaves and using that as a dye bath never happened.
A few weeks back, the mid afternoon shadows were already clammy and blackish and the coming cooler weather's pale fingers were just a few wool hairs away, almost brushing our shoulders as we stripped almost spiritless leaves off the indigo stalks.
Due to a few cool weeks in July only two harvests were possible. The pigment content was good and the plants healthy. Experimenting with fertilizer, two rows of plants with none. Two rows with a reasonable amount and two rows of complete overkill. Sadly, the fertilizer overkill rows were by far the strongest. The indigo field usually gets some locally produced dairy cow manure. It was too soon after the Fukushima nuclear accident to make any rational decision about the safety of manure and there was some old high-nitrogen chemical mulberry fertilizer gathering dust in the barn. (Raising silkworms in the early spring the mulberry is healthy enough with out it.)
The reddish stems in the stainless dye pot were as forlorn as we felt preparing them. And the resulting grey, brought to mind an overcast Canadian West Coast November walk at sundown near the water.. Gorgeous...and sublime.
Wow!
ReplyDeletei was wondering aobut the stems...
ReplyDeleteIt looks like silver, amazing.
ReplyDeletethe final colour is stunning. look forward to a finished product? what are you going to do with it?
ReplyDeleteI love the poetry you use to describe the arrival of cooler weather, and the sight of the gray thread is just beautiful.
ReplyDeleteTalk about the shivers! I'm a knitter and sometime spinner and -- wow! That skein of gray is too beautiful for words.
ReplyDeleteI have a box that keeps all the natural dyed silk thread i raised and reeled until I find time to weave it. Puling out all the different colored dyed threads and dreaming up patterns is more fun than actually weaving them. I have one almost on the loom now. I'll use the material to make shijuku for the tea ceremony.
ReplyDeletestunning, exquisite colour, and now for a stroll on the beach.
ReplyDelete