Monday, 27 May 2013

Japanese Stencil Dyeing



The use of stencils to transfer imagery and pattern to fabric and paper is used traditionally all around the world, in many different cultures, and is a fore runner to screen-printing.  What makes the Japanese stencils stand out in particular is their incredible intricacy and detail, so much so that the stencil itself could be a beautiful piece of art, without it being used for its intended purpose.



In Japan, stencils were used to apply rice-paste to un-dyed fabric. The design would be transferred to the cloth by pushing the paste through the holes gently with a large soft brush. When the paste had dried, the fabric was then dyed in indigo.  When dry, the paste would be soaked off, revealing the colour of the un-dyed fabric under the indigo, in the pattern of the stencil.  These designs ranged from one colour, and therefore one stencil layer, all the way to detailed patterns that involved the transferral of many layers of the design separately, using different dyes, similar to the way an image is created in many colours in screen printing.






It is always interesting to place a stencil over a pattern or textured surface. It creates windows and eyelets that divide the pattern underneath into sections, changing the overall look of the surface, by combining the two different designs.  It was this aspect of the use of stencils that intrigued me.  Finding throughout this project that I was constantly questioning the difference between an illustrator and a pattern designer, the use of stencils allowed me to impose my own drawings on to my collaged pattern surfaces.  I was interested also in the combination of two entirely different patterns, and the way they clashed or complimented each other.