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textiles

Produit: Tissu indigo Sangha

Taille: 150 x 100 cm

Poids: 360 g

Matière: Coton tissé à la main, teinture indigo naturel (déteint)

Prix: 45,00 €

Identifiant: B 01 002

Livraison: 1 - 2 semaines

Commander

 

 

 

 

Produit: Tissu indigo Bankass

Taille: 150 x 103 cm

Poids: 400 g

Matière: Coton tissé à la main, teinture indigo naturel (déteint)

Prix: 35,00 €

Identifiant: B 01 003

Livraison: 1 - 2 semaines

Commander

 

 

 

Voir aussi:

    

applications de tissus

poupées

 

  

 

 

 

      

 

 


Nos textiles en indigo sont tissus au Mali.

 

Indigo from West Africa

Indigo dyeing was known in Africa hundreds of years before the technique reached Europe from India. The leaves of Indigofera tinctoria, a shrub growing 150 cm tall, produce the best blue colouring of all plants. In Africa as elsewhere, synthetic indigo has largely taken over, but some natural indigo is often added in the dye because of its superior colour properties. Natural indigo can be recognised by its sweet scent.  

 

Selling cotton in Bandiagara market.

 

When dyeing using natural indigo, leaves are soaked in water and fermented for days before lye is added. Strips of cloth or whole sheets of cloth, stitched or tied together to produce patterns, are then soaked in the green dyeing solution. The cloth is dried, turning blue as a result of the contact with oxygen. The process is repeated several times. If it has been carried out properly, very little dye will come out after a few washes. Washing with salt or vinegar makes the indigo more colourfast.

The Soninké people, an ethnic group principally found in Mali and Senegal, spread the art of dyeing with indigo all over West Africa. Outside the Soninké community, dyeing is a task for women only. Today, the Futa Jallon hills of Guinea is the regional centre for indigo dyeing. In Guinea, however, most of the cloth used for dyeing is damask cotton imported from Europe. After dyeing, this elegant bazin cloth is beaten with wooden clubs to produce a shine.

In the Dogon country in Mali, however, the locally grown cotton is spun by hand (by women) then woven (by men) in 15 cm broad strips, which are sewn together (by men) into pagnes of 120 x 170 cm, either before or after dyeing. Traditionally, one of the pagnes serves as a skirt and the other as a top.

Weaving holds a special place in Dogon culture. Just as weaving means creating something new, speech is considered weaving the world. These two sacred arts were bestowed onto humanity at the same time.