Traditional resist-dyed fabric originating in the Ryukyuan Islands in Japan
Bingata (Okinawan: 紅型, literally "red style") is a traditional stencilled resist dyeing technique originating in Okinawa Prefecture. Bingata typically features a busy pattern of repeating nature motifs such as fish, flowers and fauna in a number of bright colours. Bingata is worn during traditional Ryukyuan festivals and traditional arts performances.
Bingata dates from the Ryūkyū Kingdom period (14th century), when the island of Okinawa experienced an influx of foreign goods and manufacturing techniques. It is believed to have developed as a synthesis of Indian, Chinese, and Javanese dyeing processes.
Bingata (Okinawan: 紅型, literally "red style") is a traditional stencilled resist dyeing technique originating in Okinawa Prefecture. Bingata typically...
on the bingata (紅型, lit. 'red patterns') style of dyework. Bingata could only be afforded by the people who had a rank and were wealthy. Bingata textiles...
it will be pronounced as a syllabic velar nasal [ŋ̍], as in /biɴɡata/ [biŋ̍ɡata] bingata, a method of dying clothes. And before alveolar and alveolo-palatal...
hikizuri dyed in the bingata style, featuring small, all-over motifs resembling a komon. Though similar to a komon in appearance, bingata hikizuri are still...
known as ryūsō (琉装), most notably including the traditional fabrics of bingata and bashōfu produced on the Ryukyu Islands. Modern Japanese fashion mostly...
dance, a traditional drumming dance. A traditional craft, the fabric named bingata, is made in workshops on the main island and elsewhere. The Okinawan diet...
technique's likely introduction from China. In Japan, both katazome and bingata use stencilled resist-dyeing methods to create highly-detailed resist-dyed...