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Batik
Fabric and Tie Dye
Fabric
An Indonesian site
visitor who sells batik
fabric made in Indonesia
sent me this information
on batik fabrics and
some batik fabric
images. The supplier
link for these batik
fabrics is at the bottom
of this page.
Batik
Fabrics & Garments
Batik
fabric is generally
thought of as the most
quintessentially
Indonesian textile.
Batik is an art form.
Motifs of flowers,
twinning plants, leaves
buds, flowers, birds,
butterflies, fish,
insects and geometric
forms are rich in
symbolic association and
variety.
There are about three
thousand recorded batik
fabric patterns and many
are considered to be
antique fabric designs.
How
Batik Craft Artists Make
Batik Fabric
The patterns to be dyed
into the cloth are drawn
with a canting, a wooden
'pen' fitted with a
reservoir for hot, and
liquid wax.
In
batik workshops, circles
of women sit working at
clothes draped over
frames, and periodically
replenish their supply
of wax by dipping their
canting into a central
vat. Some draw the art
designs directly on the
cloth from memory and
others wax over faint
charcoal lines.
This method of drawing
patterns in wax on fine
machine-woven cotton was
practiced as a form of
meditation by the female
courtiers of Central
Java. Traditionally,
batik tulis (tulis means
'write' in Indonesian)
is produced by women.
19th
Century Batik Method
In the 19th
century, the application
of waxed patterns with a
large copper stamp or
cap saved the batik
fashion industry from
competition with cheap
printed cloth. You can
still find these batik
stamps sometimes in
antique shops.
The semi-industrial
nature of cap work
allows it to be
performed by men. Batik
motifs recall characters
from the Hindu epics,
plants, animals, sea
creatures and gamelan
melodies.
In
Surakarta rich creams
and browns are
juxtaposed with tinges
of yellowish gold.
White, undyed cloth is
left to contrast with
the sombre opulence of
brown and blue dyes in
Yogjakarta.
The colour palettes of
the north coast were
influenced by lively
marine-trade and the
textile traditions of
the Chinese and Arab
mercantile communities
living in port and
coastal towns.
The
Symbolic Meaning of
Batik Motifs
As in other fields of
Javanese tradition the
motifs of Batik material
especially with older
antique patterns
symbolizes something.
This might be one of the
reasons why people still
adore batik fabrics up
to present date. Some
of the Motifs are:
-
Sido Mulyo
-
Sido Dadi
-
Satrio Wibowo
-
Tikel Asmorodono
All these antique motifs
have great meaning.
Just as with crystals
and gem stones it is
thought that the woman
or man wearing batik
fabrics bearing these
motifs will be furnished
with what she or he
wears.
The
Cities of Batik
Yogyakarta and Surakarta
are the art centres of
traditional antique
designs of batiks,
whilst the north coastal
town of Pekalongan is
the centre of more
modern batiks, using
more floral and birds
motifs.
There are some
well-known artists of
batik design in Jogya
and Surakarta, as well
as some big batik
manufacturers with
famous trademarks. The
growing production of
batik makes way to the
establishment of mori
(woven cotton fabrics)
factories in Jogya and
Central Java.
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