Japanese dyeing technique revived in the 20th century by Itchiku Kubota
Fragment of a kosode decorated with fan roundels, flowering vines, and wild ginger leaves in the original tsujigahana style, Momoyama period (1568-1615)
Tsujigahana (辻ヶ花) is a Japanese fabric dyeing technique that originated in the Muromachi period.
Tsujigahana (辻ヶ花) is a Japanese fabric dyeing technique that originated in the Muromachi period. The name tsujigahana translates to "flowers at the crossroads"...
lost late 15th- to early 16th-century textile dye technique known as tsujigahana (lit. "flowers at the crossroads"), which became the main focus for much...
of floating silk yarns and gilt-paper strips,: 140 and the elaborate tsujigahana technique of combination dyework and embroidery, until both were restrained...
some historic dyeing techniques – such as the original technique of tsujigahana – now impossible to recreate entirely due to the fact that the fabric...
with the time-consuming use of hand-painted dyes, a technique known as tsujigahana (lit. 'flowers at the crossroads'). This was a common technique in the...
previously-popular nerinuki plain-weave silk, which had been used to create tsujigahana. In response to the increasing material wealth of the merchant classes...
previously popular nerinuki plain-weave silk, which had been used to create tsujigahana. In response to the increasing material wealth of the merchant classes...
Mandokoro. Kato Kiyomasa, the chief tax collector arrives. He brings a Tsujigahana dyed kimono. One doesn't want it and generously gives it Sasuke for Osen...