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Sweetpea Path

...another place to wander around Welcome to my virtual notebook, a place for keeping some things I don't want to forget... A visual wall of inspiration for thought gathering. My heartfelt thanks to all who have contributed here, for this notebook would be empty without you.

Posts tagged mending:

thatshouldbemine:

Boro Futon Covers

Boro is a Japanese word meaning “tattered rags” and it’s the term frequently used to describe lovingly patched and repaired cotton bedding and clothing, used much longer than the normal expected life cycle. Like early North American patchwork quilts, boro textiles revealed much about the Japanese family’s living standards and the nature of the economy of their time. 
The penny-wise Japanese rural wife repaired the family’s sleeping futon covers again and again by “boro” patching fabric scraps over thin areas and holes in the fabric. Adding sashiko sewing to the repair gave greater strength to the material. Today international collectors regard boro textiles as uniquely Japanese and striking examples of a bygone and lost folk craft.  The same sewing technique that was used to repair boro futon covers was also put into practice when repairing noragi (farm clothing). This was done in order to increase the lifespan of the clothing.
At a time when Japan was struggling to recover from the devastation of the second World War, the Japanese regarded boro textiles with great shame. These utilitarian textiles served as an open reminder of Japan’s impoverished past. Now these same textiles are cherished and collected for the stories they tell and the windows they open into Japanese folk culture and history.

thatshouldbemine:

Boro Futon Covers

Boro is a Japanese word meaning “tattered rags” and it’s the term frequently used to describe lovingly patched and repaired cotton bedding and clothing, used much longer than the normal expected life cycle. Like early North American patchwork quilts, boro textiles revealed much about the Japanese family’s living standards and the nature of the economy of their time. 

The penny-wise Japanese rural wife repaired the family’s sleeping futon covers again and again by “boro” patching fabric scraps over thin areas and holes in the fabric. Adding sashiko sewing to the repair gave greater strength to the material. Today international collectors regard boro textiles as uniquely Japanese and striking examples of a bygone and lost folk craft.  The same sewing technique that was used to repair boro futon covers was also put into practice when repairing noragi (farm clothing). This was done in order to increase the lifespan of the clothing.

At a time when Japan was struggling to recover from the devastation of the second World War, the Japanese regarded boro textiles with great shame. These utilitarian textiles served as an open reminder of Japan’s impoverished past. Now these same textiles are cherished and collected for the stories they tell and the windows they open into Japanese folk culture and history.

(via ragzandbonez)

bandannawanderings:

Not available anywhere. My own little #sashiko additions. Old #kapital (Taken with instagram)

bandannawanderings:

Not available anywhere. My own little #sashiko additions. Old #kapital (Taken with instagram)

(via rawveganani)

(Source: cinoh)

textileandtrim:

from the book Boro

textileandtrim:

from the book Boro

(via rawveganani)

grrlandog:

boro by orime on Flickr.

grrlandog:

boro by orime on Flickr.

peccadillocollection:

closure on vintage futon cover

peccadillocollection:

closure on vintage futon cover

boro patched & sashiko stitched, mended jeans…
from the Denim Dungaree Jeans Collection

boro patched & sashiko stitched, mended jeans…

from the Denim Dungaree Jeans Collection

antique kimono 31AE
by Neville Trickett on Flickr

antique kimono 31AE

by Neville Trickett on Flickr

antique kimono 12L
from Neville Trickett on Flickr

antique kimono 12L

from Neville Trickett on Flickr

neutralnotes:

antique kimono 9I
by Neville Trickett

neutralnotes:

antique kimono 9I

by Neville Trickett

(via sarah-baird)

peccadillocollection:

boro patch work

peccadillocollection:

boro patch work

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