X
Boro for Beginners: The Step by Step Guide on Boro
Boro for Beginners: The Step by Step Guide on Boro
Boro for Beginners: The Step by Step Guide on Boro

Boro for Beginners: The Step by Step Guide on Boro Japanese Stitching Patterns and Techniques

Product ID : 49153611


Galleon Product ID 49153611
Shipping Weight 0.23 lbs
I think this is wrong?
Model
Manufacturer
Shipping Dimension 7.99 x 5 x 0.12 inches
I think this is wrong?
-
665

*Price and Stocks may change without prior notice
*Packaging of actual item may differ from photo shown
  • Electrical items MAY be 110 volts.
  • 7 Day Return Policy
  • All products are genuine and original
  • Cash On Delivery/Cash Upon Pickup Available

Pay with

About Boro For Beginners: The Step By Step Guide On Boro

The raw simplicity and functional beauty of the boro artform is something that I’ve adored for some time. I get a lot of questions about its origins, practice, and what constitutes authenticity, so hopefully this will answer some of them. Boro is essentially the practice of using a simple running stitch (a sashiko stitch) to reinforce a textile item using spare or would-be-discarded scraps of fabric. It is a practice that grew out of necessity in medieval Japan, and has evolved, four centuries later, into a distinctively gorgeous textile artform. Like sashiko itself, boro combines practical functionality with beauty. Boro’ more or less translates as ‘ragged’ or ‘tattered’. For Japanese peasants of the Edo period, it was utterly necessary to get the maximum wear and use out of their textiles, so no scrap of fabric was ever thrown away. At the time, Japanese peasants (particularly in the north) didn’t have access to durable cotton fabric and had to make do with homespun hemp fabric, which would typically show signs of wear more quickly. Using fabric scraps dyed with indigo or brown earthy tones, garments were continually mended and passed down over generations. Each additional scrap of fabric—with its own unique story—would come to map the family’s history and heritage. The evolution of patterns and motifs in the reinforcement stitching (sashiko) added beautiful decorative touches to these garments. GET YOUR COPY TODAY BY SCROLLING UP AND CLICKING BUY NOW TO GET YOUR COPY TODAY