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  2. Shibori - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shibori

    A section of kumo shibori (spider shibori) dyed with indigo, next to kumo shibori that has not been dyed yet. Shibori (しぼり/絞り, from the verb root shiboru – "to wring, squeeze or press" [1]: 7 ) is a Japanese manual tie-dyeing technique, which produces a number of different patterns on fabric.

  3. Tsujigahana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tsujigahana

    Tsujigahana is a variety of kimono created by the technique of shibori. The extravagant patterns were rather more picturesque and it was more eye-catching than other ordinary kinds of kimono. Tsujigahana technique is in a shroud of mystery as it is not clearly known who invented it or why it was called Tsujigahana.

  4. Batik - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Batik

    Batik is a dyeing technique using wax resist.The term is also used to describe patterned textiles created with that technique. Batik is made by drawing or stamping wax on a cloth to prevent colour absorption during the dyeing process.

  5. Oshibori - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oshibori

    Oshibori presented on a small bamboo stand. An oshibori (おしぼり or お絞り [1]), or hot towel in English, is a wet hand towel offered to customers in places such as restaurants or bars, and used to clean one's hands before eating.

  6. Textile printing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Textile_printing

    A pattern is cut from a sheet of stout paper or thin metal with a sharp-pointed knife, the uncut portions representing the part that will be left uncoloured. The sheet is laid on the fabric and colour is brushed through its interstices. The peculiarity of stenciled patterns is that they have to be held together by ties.

  7. Pattern search (optimization) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pattern_search_(optimization)

    Later, Torczon, Lagarias and co-authors [4] [5] used positive-basis techniques to prove the convergence of another pattern-search method on specific classes of functions. Outside of such classes, pattern search is a heuristic that can provide useful approximate solutions for some issues, but can fail on others.

  8. Frequent pattern discovery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frequent_pattern_discovery

    Frequent pattern discovery (or FP discovery, FP mining, or Frequent itemset mining) is part of knowledge discovery in databases, Massive Online Analysis, and data mining; it describes the task of finding the most frequent and relevant patterns in large datasets. [1] [2] The concept was first introduced for mining transaction databases. [3]

  9. Tablet weaving - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tablet_weaving

    Ram's Horn pattern of tablet weaving. Some patterns require that weavers thread each card individually. Others allow "continuous warping", which puts the threads through the holes of an entire deck – the four threads in the deck of cards are wrapped around two stationary objects, dropping one card each time around the fixed points.