ART: Kalamkari, Batik, Tie&Dye,

Batik traditionally uses a manual wax-resist dyeing technique to dye the fabric. Kalamkari uses harmless, natural vegetable dyes to hand print fabrics and needs running water. This traditional art has specific designs that convey the cultural lores and legends of India. Warli is a tribal art painted on walls with bamboo sticks dipped in mixture of rice paste & gum at rituals. It is in white over red ochre plastered walls - with just dots, triangles & straight lines.
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Red and White Hand Dyed Shibori Fabric - Etsy
Inspiration from Etsy. Shibori doesn't always have to be indigo.
DIY Pink Shibori Cloth Napkins
DIY Shibori techniques \\ alice & lois The word comes from the verb root shiboru, "to wring, squeeze, press."
Shibori - Japanese Tie-Dye - Annabel Wilson @ Townhill Studio
Shibori Designs by Annabel Wilson. Shibori is a Japanese manual resist dyeing technique, which produces patterns on fabric, also known as the pleat and bind technique or tie and dye.
DIY Shibori
Today marks HonestlyWTF's four year anniversary. Four years! To celebrate, we're revisiting the very first tutorial we ever featured on the site: shibori tie dye. Lauren and I first discovered shibori after discovering an old photo on the web. The idea of recreating an ancient Japanese dyeing
Dupatta-Pochampally Ikkat Silk : Ikat, or Ikkat, is a dyeing technique used to pattern textiles employing a resist dyeing process on the warp fibres, the weft fibres, or in the rare and costly 'double ikat' both warp and weft, prior to dyeing and weaving. The resist is formed by binding bundles of threads with a tight wrapping applied in the desired pattern & dyed. The bindings may then be altered & the thread bundles dyed again with another color to produce elaborate, multicolored patterns.
NameBright - Domain Expired
Bandhani (Tie & Dye) The meticulous process of tie and dye worn by various communities is created mainly by the Khatri artisans. The chitarnar or the artist draws the patterns on the fabric, the bandnari or knotter pinches and ties the dots and the Ranganaar or dyer who finally dyes the textile piece. Textiles where more than three to four colors are used, the lightest hue is dyed followed by tying and thereafter dyeing it in brighter color.
History of Bandhani
History of Bandhani:The technique involves dyeing a fabric which is tied tightly with a thread at several points,thus producing a variety of patterns like Leheriya, Mothra, Ekdali and Shikari depending on the manner in which the cloth is tied.