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  2. Tamaki niime - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tamaki_niime

    tamaki niime specializes in apparel produced using Banshu-ori fabric. Banshu-ori is a traditional brand of fabric manufactured in the North Harima area of Hyogo. The methods used to weave and dye the fabric are based on a technology brought to Hyogo by ”Miyadaiku” Yasubei Hida from Kyoto around 1800.

  3. Noren - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noren

    Traditional fabric shop in Nara with noren in front of the entrance. Noren (ๆš–็ฐพ) are traditional Japanese fabric dividers hung between rooms, on walls, in doorways, or in windows. They usually have one or more vertical slits cut from the bottom to nearly the top of the fabric, allowing for easier passage or viewing.

  4. Eirakuya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eirakuya

    Eirakuya shop during the Meiji Era. Eirakuya during the early Showa Period. The company was founded in the year 1615 [4] and is known as the oldest cotton cloth dealer of Japan. [1] Before the Bakumatsu, the store of the business was lost in fires twice and was reconstructed in the early Meiji Period.

  5. Boro (textile) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boro_(textile)

    The term is derived from the Japanese term "boroboro", meaning something tattered or repaired. [2] The term 'boro' typically refers to cotton, linen and hemp materials, mostly hand-woven by peasant farmers, that have been stitched or re-woven together to create an often many-layered material used for warm, practical clothing.

  6. Tanmono - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tanmono

    Cotton did not become widely available throughout Japan until the mid-1700s; commoners continued to rely on wild and cultivated bast fibers. [7] Working-class fabrics were mostly made of hemp or ramie (asa). [a] Cotton was more expensive, especially outside the western regions of Japan, where it was grown. Second-hand cotton cloth was, however ...

  7. Tsumugi (cloth) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tsumugi_(cloth)

    An unlined (hitoe) kimono made from tsumugi, showing soft drape.Tsumugi (็ดฌ) is a traditional slub-woven silk fabric from Japan.It is a tabby weave material woven from yarn produced using silk noil, short-staple silk fibre (as opposed to material produced using longer, filament yarn silk fibres).

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