Printing and painting
The art and technology of permanently coloring cloth with
dye originated in India and spread throughout the world
via trade. As early as 3000 BCE, Indian dyers were producing
solid colored and patterned cloth using vegetable dyes
and mordants. Some of the cloth was patterned through
printing, a technique that uses very simple tools. Printing,
painting, and batik are grouped together here because
they share some common principles.
Hand printing and painting is done by three methods. Dye
is applied directly to the cloth by means of a printing
block or a paint brush. Adinkra cloth from Ghana is an
example of direct printing.
When wax or a starch that blocks dye penetration is applied
by either brush or block it is called resist printing.
When the cloth is put into the dye solution, the resist
areas remain the original color.
Batik from Indonesia, adire and stencil patterns from
Nigeria and drawn and stencil patterns from Japan use
this technique. The tjanting and tjegul are batik tools
that originated in Indonesia. Brushes, feathers, combs
and other implements have been used to create resist patterns.
In India and Iran, another method is used whereby mordants-the
chemical agents that create the bond between fiber and
dye-are applied to the undyed cloth either by printing
or painting with a brush or pen. When the cloth is immersed
in the dye bath the areas with mordant take on color while
the rest of the fabric remains undyed. In India the resulting
fabric is called kalamkari, meaning pen work. In Iran
it is known as qalamkar.

Adinkra
cloth is a stamped fabric that is made in Ghana, Africa.
Symbolic motifs which represent proverbs are carved from
calabashes, a type of gourd, and are dipped into a black
dye made from the bark of the badie tree. Adinkra artists
divide the fabric into squares and then create patterns
and repetitive designs using the inked stamps. When it
is used for funerary or ceremonial occasions the cloth
is yellow or red. However, the stamped designs are always
printed in black. Adinkra cloth has been used traditionally
for funerary occasions, but has grown in popularity and
the symbols can be seen on a variety of clothing and objects.
Vocabulary
Adinkra - Ghanaian textiles created by printing with
carved calabashes on fabric
Ancestors - people from whom one is descended
Calabash - a gourd
Ceremony - a formal act or acts prescribed by ritual,
protocol or convention
Gourd - a family of plants that includes pumpkin, melon,
squash and cucumber
Pattern - a grouping of shapes, forms, objects, concepts
or behaviors that repeats
Proverb - a brief saying that is a general truth, fundamental
principle or rule of conduct
Repetition - happening more than once
Symbol - something that stands for something else
Tradition - behaviors that have been passed down through
generations
Introduction
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