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Shifu - Woven Paper Treasures

Click on the image above to watch a a YouTube video from John's Textile of the Month Club dealing with decorating paper before slicing into strips to weave.

The highest quality handmade paper, the same as that used to print their paper currency, is often used in fine weavings. It's first coated with a thin layer of lacquer and while still tacky, gold, silver, platinum, and other precious and semiprecious metals and pigments are applied in small sheets as leafing or dusted from above in small wafers through graded sieves. Even such exotics as peacock feathers and lapis lazuli may be pressed into service. The net result is a stunning bit of beauty in the form of rugged paper.

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While this paper may be used as the background to artistic painting or in bookbinding and other arts, it is most often used in the textile industry. The sheets are cut into thin strips by hand or with the aid of an automated guillotine while retaining a wide border to ensure that the strips remain in order and the imagery intact.

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Figurative designs, as well as basic gold or silver leafing, may be woven flat as a supplemental weft in Nishijin-ori or as the warp used in Saga-nishiki.

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The thin strips may also be wrapped around a silk core to produce lustrous threads for use in embroidery, couching, and a whole range of luxury weaves.

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