Wiki Loves Living Heritage/Blue-dyeing
blue-dyeing
- reserve-print-process applied to natural materials such as linen, cotton or silk
- Wikidata item: blue-dyeing (Q882441)
- UNESCO ICH ID: RL/01365
- instance of: traditional craftsmanship, knowledge and practices concerning nature and the universe and impression
- country: Austria, Czech Republic, Germany, Hungary and Slovakia
- subclass of: textile printing
- intangible cultural heritage status: German Nationwide Inventory of Intangible Cultural Heritage (), list of UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage elements in Austria (), Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity () and Immateriell kulturarv
- described at URL: https://ich.unesco.org/en/RL/blaudruck-modrotisk-kekfestes-modrotla-resist-block-printing-and-indigo-dyeing-in-europe-01365 (English)
https://ich.unesco.org/fr/RL/le-blaudruck-modrotisk-kekfestes-modrotla-impression-de-reserves-a-la-planche-et-teinture-a-l-indigo-en-europe-01365?RL=01365 (French)
https://ich.unesco.org/es/RL/blaudruck-modrotisk-kekfestes-modrotla-tenido-o-impresion-por-reserva-en-azul-indigo-01365?RL=01365 (Spanish)
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Blaudruck/Modrotisk/Kékfestés/Modrotlač, which translates directly as blueprint or blue-dyeing, refers to the practice of printing a dye-resistant paste onto a cloth before dyeing over it with indigo dye. The resistant paste prevents the dye from penetrating the design, thereby ensuring the applied design remains white or undyed after the dyeing process. To apply the designs onto the cloth, practitioners use hand-crafted blocks that are up to 300 years old, featuring regionally-inspired patterns as well as generic designs or Christian motifs. The representation of local flora and fauna is interrelated with the local culture of the regions.
Traditional indigo blue-dyeing does not end with printing, however: the textile chain involves preparing the raw materials and spinning, weaving, finishing, printing and dyeing them. Nowadays, businesses engaged in the practice mainly comprise small, family-owned workshops, run by the second to seventh generation of printers. Each family workshop involves the cooperation of the various family members, who each participate in every step of the production regardless of their gender. Traditional knowledge is still based on (mainly family-owned) journals dating back to the nineteenth century and passed on through observation and hands-on practice.
Stakeholders feel a strong emotional bond with their products, and the element encapsulates a sense of pride in long-lasting family traditions.[1]
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References
- ↑ "UNESCO - Blaudruck/Modrotisk/Kékfestés/Modrotlač, resist block printing and indigo dyeing in Europe". ich.unesco.org. Retrieved 2023-04-07.
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