There are two major environmental influences on the use of colours that African hand dyers use to dye their fabrics with – the strong African sun and the colours that can be found in nature.
Sally Scott, a top South African quilt artist has the following to say: “My love of the landscape developed as a child, brought up in rural Zimbabwe. Since moving to the Eastern Cape, I have set out to capture the atmosphere of this province…. [I am] fascinated by the variety of vegetation and the fresh quality of light.
The strong, often harsh, African sun has a major impact on the colours that fabrics are dyed. Glenda from Amafu Fabrics (www.amafu.co.za) explains the influence of the African sun on colour: “I tend to work (her own hand dyed fabrics) in very strong colours but not necessarily bright colours and I think this is where the influence of Africa comes in. Part of this is to do with the very strong sunlight we have here and anything that is pastel tends to die.” The image below shows some of Glenda’s hand dyed fabrics:
This photo also shows the other environmental influence on hand dyed fabric – that of the natural dyes available from the earth – browns, ochre, red and black. Interestingly enough, although nature is full of green, it does not supply any natural green dyes. For example: the colour of the Kalahari Desert sand is red-brown which stains the fabric when you get it on your clothing. The earliest fabric dyers would have used this sand to dye their fabric this particular colour.
Indigo dyed fabric is very popular in Africa. The world’s only source of natural blue
dye comes from the Indigo plant which is mainly found in West Africa, China and Japan. Indigo plants supply hues ranging from the palest sky blue to the deepest midnight blue. Combined with other dyes, indigo dye also makes greens, most purples and non-corrosive blacks.
A popular South African fabric, called SheShwe is dyed using Indigo Dye. The photo below shows an example of Indigo dyed SheShwe fabric.
Odette Tolksdorf, another top South African quilt artist talks about the fact that her “art quilts have often been influenced by the multi-layered African environment.” Her work uses “rich and expressive colour”.
Bibliography
1. www.amafu.co.za
2. www.sallyscott.co.za
3. www.odettetolksdorf.co.za
4. http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_hb3120/is_1_76/ai_n29065451/
5. Google Images
6. Ndebele by Margaret Courtney-Clarke
3 comments:
Very interesting! Did not know that SA was so full of colour - regarding fabric. I know about beats and wood craft, but very little about fabric of Africa.
Elzaan
Very interesting post - thanks for sharing! Dyeing fabrics has been something I've wanted to do for a very long time, but since I'm a veeeery newbie to it, it will take some time to learn. :)
Thanks for the comments. Africa is full of colour - as you will have noticed I am passionate about Africa and her colours.
Re - Dyeing fabric - I'm also desperate to do it but am scared of the colour mixing bit. We have school holidays for 10 days so I hope to get up the courage to dye some fabric. Will keep you updated
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