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techniques
Open Archives 3
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Weaving of Mosi (fine ramie) in the Hansan region
These photos were taken at the Hansan Mosi Museum in Seocheon, Republic of Korea on 26 July, 2019. Weaving of Mosi in Hansan is transmitted by middle-aged women in the township located in South Chungcheong Province, Republic of Korea. The region boasts fertile land and sea winds that allow ramie plants to thrive. Weaving ramie cloth involves a number of processes, including harvesting, boiling and bleaching ramie plants, spinning yarn out of ramie fibre, and weaving it on a traditional loom. Ramie cloth is comfortable in hot summer weather and is used to produce a variety of clothing from dress suits and military uniforms to mourning garments. The whiteness of the bleached ramie fabric, as well as its refined quality and neatness, makes it suitable for high-end clothing as well as for clothing for ordinary people. Weaving of Mosi traditionally takes place in the form of women-led family operations in which mothers transmit techniques and experience to their daughters or daughters-in-law. The tradition also binds the community together with neighbours gathered and working in a designated section of the town. At present, around 500 people in the province are engaged in the diverse activities of weaving fine ramie. (Reference. UNESCO https://ich.unesco.org/en/RL/weaving-of-mosi-fine-ramie-in-the-hansan-region-00453) As National Intangible Cultural Heritage No.15, it is enlisted on the UNESCO Representative Lists of Intangible Cultural Heritage in 2011.
South Korea -
Henna Art
This photo was taken right after I got a piece of “henna art” painted onto my arm. It happened during my visit to the Moroccan pavilion at “EXPO 2017 Astana”. This plant-based skin dye art carries significant symbolic importance and is considered beneficial for both the mind and the soul. It is said that the best medicine is often the one the earth gives us, and henna is one of the perfect hidden gems transmitted from generation to generation. It is not just a temporary fast tattoo; indeed, authentic Moroccan henna art is a craft that requires years of practice and entails a broad spectrum of various styles, techniques, symbolisms, traditions, and rituals. Prior to the beginning of the drawing process, a master should know how to make a perfect henna paste from natural ingredients and achieve the right structure and colour. This process alone requires years of continuous practice. Additionally, henna artists follow their intuition in their hands-on-technique, making sure that every work is truly unique. Combining the motifs in an endless variation also takes years of study and practice.
Morocco -
Nubijang (Quilting)
Nubi is a method of sewing in order to put cotton, fur or mulberry paper between the outer fabric and the lining of cloth, or of broad pricking without putting anything between the outer fabric and lining to strengthen the cloth or to make it warmer. Nubijang refers to this skill or to an artisan with such a skill. The method became a common practice following the introduction of cotton growing. Some monks wore the same robe for tens of years, repairing it with this method. Nubi techniques developed to a point where even ordinary people came to adopt them. Among the things needed for the work of nubi are thread that matches as closely as possible that used on the clothes or bedding, needles, scissors, a heating iron, a push stick, a measuring stick, and a thimble. Regular straight lines are chiefly used for the nubi work on clothes or bedding, but a mixture of straight and curved lines are also used to make a pattern when working on wrapping cloth or pouches. The country’s traditional manual nubi sewing is said to be an artwork similar to embroidery, but it is gradually disappearing, as the work takes time and does not bring much economic benefit. (reference: www.heritage.go.kr)
South Korea