Saga Nishiki
Saga Nishiki (佐賀錦, Saga-nishiki) is a form of brocading from Saga Prefecture, Japan. It is a unique form of brocading in that Japanese paper is used as the warp. This paper is coated in either gold, silver or lacquer. The weft is a silk thread which is dyed. As the technique is time-consuming, only several inches are produced each day.[1]
History
Saga Nishiki was created at the end of the Edo period by Kashima Nabeshima, the daimyō of Saga. At this time it was referred to as Kashima Nishiki. It was not until the Japan–British Exhibition of 1910 that it was renamed "Saga Nishiki".[2]
Gallery
- A woman brocades
- A Saga nishiki fabric
- A Saga nishiki fabric
- A handbag
- A handbag
- A handbag
- A brooch
- The gold threads used in the brocade
- Detail of a Saga nishiki design
gollark: And if a simple strategy works to get money, they'll do that, and it will no longer work.
gollark: What I mean is that people really like having money, and so there are lots of professionals working on doing trading to attain money.
gollark: Oops, that was accidentally quite insulting.
gollark: If it was actually a good and financially sound idea to run that sort of simple strategy, then presumably the many smart and competent people with more money looking at markets would do that, and thus eliminate any easy strategy available to people like you.
gollark: What of the "efficient market hypothesis"?
References
- Saga Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Saga Nishiki Process, August 2, 2007.
- Saga Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Saga Nishiki History, August 2, 2007.
External links
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See also
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