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What
is Batik? It
is a textile art that involves a specialized
method of applying dye to fabric, usually cotton
or silk. There
are about 3,000 recorded batik patterns, some of
which include flowers, plants, birds, animals,
insects, and geometric forms are all popular
motifs. The
use of computers in developing batik designs
promises to add many more new and exciting
designs to this library.
Think
of batik as the reverse of painting.
Instead of painting an area where you
wish there to be color or a design on a piece of
fabric, wax is applied to the area to keep it
color free.
The fabric is then immersed in dye,
coloring all the areas of the fabric that are
wax free. The
fabric is dried and then the wax is heated in
order to remove it. |
| More
about Batik Tapestry... |
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Kalagas,
which are embroidered Burmese tapestries, have
been around for about 150 years.
Some of the techniques used in making
kalagas are much older.
For example, the techniques of attaching
gold thread and jewels called "shwe-chi-doe"
were known to have existed in Burma over 1,000
years ago.
Items made using the "shwe-chi-doe"
method were and still are rare because they were
made from real gold and jewels, making them
prohibitively expensive for the common person or
every day use.
Kalagas
evoke in us a sense of the exotic and- for good
reason. Originally
developed in the Mandalay court, they reflected
the designs found at that time in the palace and
in the pagodas.
Popular design themes for kalagas
included art typically seen on temple walls.
Interestingly, these types of designs are
still popular today. This
is one reason it is common for people to think
that the kalaga art form is much older than it
is since the most popular subjects illustrated
on these tapestries are taken from tales and
legends of ancient history.
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| More
about Kalaga... |
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The
Japanese Woodblock Print is an art form, which
highlights flowing, curved outlines, simplistic
forms as well as the detailing of flat areas
containing color.
This form of art has not only existed for
a long time in Asian history, but it has also
deeply impacted artists in both Europe and North
America throughout the 19th century. |
| Japanese
Woodblock Prints ... |
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