(Mingei print: Two crests) - after Keisuke Serizawa by Unidentified
(Mingei print: Two crests) - after Keisuke Serizawa
Unidentified
(Mingei print: Two crests) - after Keisuke Serizawa
Katazome comes from the traditional kimono-dyeing technique that, after the Second World War, was applied to paper when the cost of producing stencil-dyed silk and cotton fabric was too high. These stencil prints were sold as stand-alone works that preserved the historic beauty of kimono, and also allowed for stylistic experimentation as Japan embraced Modernism.
The katazome process begins with carving stencils out of shibugami, kozo paper treated in fermented green persimmon juice and soda ash, making it stiff and water resistant. Artisans draw their designs on the surface, carve out the design to create stencils, and then place the stencils strategically on the paper. Then begins the process of blocking out areas of the paper that the artist wishes to remain white using resist paste, and dyeing the areas that aren't blocked. Various types of brushes are used to achieve gradient or solid color.
