Snowflakes - Indigo-dyed fabric - 100% cotton - 13 3/4" wide
Snowflakes - Indigo-dyed fabric - 100% cotton - 13 3/4" wide
Snowflakes - Indigo-dyed fabric - 100% cotton - 13 3/4" wide
Snowflakes - Indigo-dyed fabric - 100% cotton - 13 3/4" wide
Snowflakes - Indigo-dyed fabric - 100% cotton - 13 3/4" wide

Buaisou

Snowflakes - Indigo-dyed fabric - 100% cotton - 13 3/4" wide

Sale price$12.00
Sold out

Fabric is sold by the quarter yard and cut as one piece. Quantity 1 = 1/4 yard.

Bolt:

Bolt

Pickup currently unavailable at 6328 San Pablo Ave

Snowflakes - Indigo-dyed fabric - 100% cotton - 13 3/4" wide

Bolt 1

6328 San Pablo Ave

Pickup currently unavailable

6328 San Pablo Ave
Oakland CA 94608
United States

Bolt:Bolt 1

Content: 100% cotton
Width: 13 3/4"
Price per 1/4 yard: $12.00
Price per yard: $48.00

We sell our fabric by the quarter yard and cut as one piece.
This enables you to purchase only what you need. 

Example: Quantity 1 = 1/4 yard. Quantity 2 = 1/2 yard. Etc.
Please contact is with any questions you may have. Info@averbforkeepingwarm.com

This fabric is 13 3/4" wide.

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Every Winter, we try to create a custom product with BUAISOU for you. This year, BUAISOU has dyed this incredible fabric. They made this fabric by folding the fabric, using blocks and clamps, and then dipping the fabric multiple times into the indigo vat. The results are patterns resembling snowflakes. 

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This narrow-width fabric is hand-dyed with indigo by a group of Japanese indigo farmers, dyers, and artists named BUAISOU.

The fabric is 100% cotton. It is woven on looms specializing in the narrow-width of 13 3/4". It is tightly woven, yet lightweight, suitable for garments, home accessories like quilts, and mending. Create a breath-taking wall hanging or splendid table runner by simply hemming the two ends using threads indigo dyed by BUAISOU

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In a rural corner of Japan, there are a group of people who work together under the name BUAISOU who are completely dedicated to indigo. BUAISOU is comprised of a farm, dye studio, and design-studio and located in Tokushima prefecture, the historical center of indigo farming and processing in Japan. Every year they grow and harvest their own indigo, dry the leaves, and compost them. They combine this compost with wood ash lye, wheat bran, and water and use fermentation to create indigo vats.

Within these vats, they dye every shade of blue, on items such as cotton fabric, sashiko thread, and sewing thread. The range of colors is created by repeatedly dipping the fabric into the indigo vats. Between each dip, the fabric is exposed to air. 

You can read more about BUAISOU and learn how to make this kind of indigo vat in the book we wrote titled Journeys in Natural Dyeing.