jen 的个人资料XJYX照片日志列表 工具 帮助
9月30日

忙.....着玩.....又要,,,忙..着学习了

最近朋友和自己的生日都堆在了一快儿,真是有乐同享!
有吃有喝,有玩有笑.从在Sydney Uni Alumni Festival中拍臭美的艺术照,到在State Theatre 观赏Imperial Russian Ballet 精妙绝伦的Swan Lake...到饱尝buffet,到不学自通地玩bongies和guitar...再冒着狂风到南天寺拜拜许愿...到Kiama 纽省最小的城镇溜达买二手工艺品..
再来个long weekend星期一不上班....星期二又在office 欢度了生日的一天,吃有美丽天鹅的绿茶豆沙蛋糕...这人生过得可真是滋润啊...
不过又该收骨头了,还有三星期就要交marketing assignment了,所以不得不读书ing咯
9月16日

病了.....<_> ??

最近看了血色湘西是超爱的,因此喜欢上了像李桓这样的男子汉.三怒在地一至三集的想象特别有魅力,从跳水到舞龙到赛龙舟都演绎得勇猛威武,现实生活中也许很少会有这种铁汉.三怒的形象又有些象"硬汉"中的老三,也是这种平头发型,黝黑的皮肤,行侠仗义,只是不同的是老三的以外事故造成了他的智障,而骨子里却是非分明,就如三怒一样爱狠分明.另外明显不同的是老三曾经是个水兵,处于的年代是现代,而三怒还是在三四十年代的湘西,他需要穗穗这样的一个感爱感狠,勇于接受新事物的女孩来刺激他在那封闭地深山老林中的禁锢思想.共产党员童老师则是牵引这对后生妹伢血泪交融的感情史和最终凄美壮观的在同一条战线上生死搏斗.

不多评说咯.来贴点最近的小照吧,轻松轻松..和朋友的聚会
嗯,九月我的birth month...愿望我爱的人和世界上所有的人平安快乐....没有战争,只有和平!如果说祝愿没有饥荒,天灾难,那是虚文,就实在些吧,愿望简单扼要为主,哈哈!
个人的愿望,踏艺术之旅!有一部不错的NIKON 相机掠影拾金.

Image Hosted by ImageShack.us

我们大家都很喜欢这张柔和的光...第二次来到MENYA,是我们欢送NOK之时....

Image Hosted by ImageShack.us


PRE-MOON FESTIVAL 食帮大聚餐,真实好个满汉全席!我们最后是横扫一片天的儡

Image Hosted by ImageShack.us


真可谓美仑美奂!

Image Hosted by ImageShack.us


老雷请客哦,当然所有同志都来捧场.嘿嘿

Image Hosted by ImageShack.us



再来贴一些最近的拙作吧...没有好的照相机,SONY傻瓜拍的

我的香水们...和灯影

Image Hosted by ImageShack.us
Image Hosted by ImageShack.us
Image Hosted by ImageShack.us
Image Hosted by ImageShack.us
9月6日

Silk Ikat

Went to the exhibition of Silk Ikats of Central Asia.

Even though looks like a fairly small collection, however it is atcually worthless.

The process of making silk ikats are amazingly complicately.

"Ikat, or Ikkat, is a style of weaving that uses a resist dyeing process similar to tie-dye on either the warp or weft before the threads are woven to create a pattern or design. A Double Ikat is when both the warp and the weft are tie-dyed before weaving.

Ikat means "to tie" or "to bind" in the Malay language and has the same root as the words dekat ("close"), lekat ("to stick"), pikat ("to catch") etc. The word Katt has the same meaning in all of the south Indian languages but there may be no relation. Through common usage, the word has come to describe both the process and the cloth itself. Ikats have been woven in cultures all over the world. In Central and South America, Ikat is still common in Argentina, Bolivia, Ecuador, Guatemala and Mexico. In the 19th century, the Silk Road desert oases of Bukhara and Samarkand (in what is now Uzbekistan in Central Asia) were famous for their fine silk Uzbek Ikat. India, Japan and several South-East Asian countries have cultures with long histories of Ikat production. Double Ikats can still be found in India, Guatemala, Japan and the Indonesian islands of Bali and Kalimantan.

Like any craft or art form, ikats vary widely from country to country and region to region. Designs may have symbolic of ritual meaning or have been developed for export trade. Ikats are often symbols of status, wealth, power and prestige. Perhaps because of the difficulty and time required to make ikats, some cultures believe the cloth is imbued with magical powers."

The very begining starting from hanging 14 to up to 2000 strings of silk down from a wooden hanger, and to tie the areas where white is wished to stay according to the desirable patterns. Then send the tied silks to different colour dying expertise to dye the colours wanted. After the dying is completed, horizontal strings of velvet, silk or cotton will be crossed over to the vertical strings of silk. To finish up, braids and internal cotton piece may be decorated and sewed to make the ikat piece beautiful and comfortable. Among all, velvet ranked first in terms of quality and value, silk the second, and cotton the last.

The ikat pieces are to show social status, wealth and power of a particular person in the "5 tan" areas where they were later under the reign of The Soviet Union. The earliest shown in the exhibition can be traced back to the 18th century only as the previous ikats had all been worn out due to the aging. However the process and knowledge of ikat making had been existed in the world for more than 100 years.

The dowry pieces are very exquisite, with fake sleaves haning at the back of the ikat, sashes hanging down, exuberant colours and beautiful patterns from top to toe. The ikat pieces reflecting three major stages of women are very interesting. For Islamic unmarried girls, they will all wear the ikat with black background along with the patterns, braids etc as usual. For married women, they will wear yellow ikat along with designs such as fake sleeves hanging at the back showing a taste of fashion; For women over 63 of age, the ikat will have a white background again with the all time wonderful patterns.

The jewelery piece for the nomadic women are as tough as the life they are living to suit their life styles, these jewelleries are heavy and huge, as well as the dowry headress. The wedding tradition of vieling the face is also in the islamic tradition same as almost the rest of the world! nomadic women have much more free social status as they do not have to viel their face when going out to the public, where as the traditional Islamic women has to do so.

 

 

The history of ikat

There are known links between ikat production in India and South-East Asia. Patola cloth, a double ikat from Gujarat, western India, used to be exported to Indonesia for the use of the royal families. As early as the fifteenth century Gujarati merchants brought patola to Indonesian rulers, an activity taken over by the Dutch at the beginning of the seventeenth century to gain concessions in the spice trade.[1]

The patterns in the Patola Ikats are strikingly similar to the double ikats produced in Bali, Indonesia. Ancient trading routes linked India and South-East Asia, like Cambodia and also linked Central Asia with India. Because woven fabric rarely survives for more than a few centuries it is extremely difficult, if not impossible, to determine where the technique of Ikat originated. It probably developed in several different locations independently. Ikat was known to be produced in several pre-Columbian Central and South American cultures. Ikat floral patterns are traditionally used in Europe on Mallorca, Spain.

How ikat is made

Ikats created by dyeing the warp are the easiest to make. Before the warp strings are attached to the loom they are arranged into bundles. Each bundle is tied and dyed separately, so that a pattern will emerge when the loom is set up. This takes a good deal of skill. The tightly bound bundles are sometimes covered with wax or some other material that will keep the dyes from penetrating. The process is repeated several times for additional colors.

Some patterns have many strands in the cloth that are all dyed the same way which creates a blocky design. In some weaving traditions each strand of the cloth may be dyed differently from the ones next to it. Usually the pattern repeats in symmetrical or asymmetrical ways. In the illustration above, the right side of the weaving is identical to the left. To make these elaborate patterns the weaver will still bundle and dye several threads together, but when the loom is prepared, a single thread will be used from each bundle for each section of the pattern. Elaborate ikat patterns like this are often handed down from generation to generation in the same family.

After the threads are dyed the loom is set up. The pattern is visible to the weaver when the dyed threads are used as warp. Threads can be adjusted so that they line up correctly with each other. Some ikat styles (like in Japan and Guatemala) don't try to get the patterns precisely lined up, others (like in Timor in Indonesia) the patterns are so accurate, that you have to look closely to determine that the pattern was not printed on the cloth.Dying the weft makes it much more difficult to make ikats with precise patterns. The weft is one continuous strand that is woven back and forth, so any errors in how the string is tied and dyed are cumulative. Because of this, weft ikats are usually used when the precision of the pattern is not the main concern. Some patterns become transformed by the weaving process into irregular and erratic designs. However, the precise images of Japanese ikats are made from weft ikat when they are not double ikats.

Double ikats are the most difficult to produce. In the finest examples from India and Indonesia, the warp and the weft are precisely tied and dyed so that the patterns interlock and reinforce each other when the fabric is woven.

The most precise ikat is the Japanese oshima -- thrice-woven cloth. The warp and weft threads are used as warp to weave stiff fabric, upon which the thread for the ikat weaving is spot-dyed. Then the mats are unraveled and the dyed thread is woven into oshima cloth.

Other variants

In Thailand the local ikat type of woven cloth is known as Matmi (also spelt 'Mudmee' or 'Mudmi').[2] Traditional Mudmi cloth was woven for daily use among the nobility. Other uses included ceremonial costumes and Buddhist monks' robes. Nowadays it is mostly sold in the tourist market.

This type of cloth is the favorite silk item woven by ethnic Khmer people living in southern Isaan, mainly in Surin, Sisaket and Buriram.[3]