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  • Rienzome Tenugui Cloth with Female Ninja Pattern (1000)

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    Rienzome Tenugui Cloth with Female Ninja Pattern (1000)

    Kunoichi. This Tenugui cloth from Rienzome features a mysterious pattern of female ninja eye. Female ninja are referred to as Kunoichi. In Japanese, the character for 'woman' is ???. In this...
    $13.07
  • Rienzome Tenugui Cloth with Indigo Pear Pattern (993)

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    Rienzome Tenugui Cloth with Indigo Pear Pattern (993)

    Pear. This Tenugui cloth from Rienzome features a beautiful indigo pear pattern. The traditional pattern, often used for wrapping gifts, represents a circle cut pear. "Tenugui" is often translated as...
    $13.07
  • Rienzome Tenugui Cloth with Indigo Kasuri Pattern (773)

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    Rienzome Tenugui Cloth with Indigo Kasuri Pattern (773)

    Kasuri. This Tenugui cloth from Rienzome features a beautiful indigo "Kasuri" pattern, often used on Kimonos and traditional accessories. "Tenugui" is often translated as "Japanese towel", but this...
    $13.07
  • Rienzome Tenugui Cloth with Mixed Patterns (831)

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    Rienzome Tenugui Cloth with Mixed Patterns (831)

    Mixed Patterns. This Tenugui cloth from Rienzome beautifully patches together a large number of different patterns. "Tenugui" is often translated as "Japanese towel", but this translation fails to...
    $13.07
  • Tenugui with Riverside Heron Beauty (306)

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    Tenugui with Riverside Heron Beauty (306)

    Riverside Beauty. This Tenugui cloth from Rienzome features a beautiful Kabuki, Japanese theater, scene, where a beautiful elegant white heron turns into a young woman and dances to express her...
    $19.60
  • Tenugui with Wisteria Beauty Pattern (332)

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    Tenugui with Wisteria Beauty Pattern (332)

    Wisteria. This beautiful tenugui from Rienzome feautures a well-known Kabuki, Japanese theater, scene, with a beautiful dancing young woman under the Wisteria plant. As the wisteria plant is often...
    $16.34
  • Tenugui with Modern Kabuki Play (322)

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    Tenugui with Modern Kabuki Play (322)

    Kanjinch?????. This Tenugui cloth from Rienzome features a Kabuki, Japanese theater, motif. Kanjinch?? (?????????, The Subscription List) is a Japanese kabuki play by Namiki Gohei III, based on the...
    $18.51

Although the cloths themselves seem simple, the production process requires a steady hand and the eyes of a true artisan. The entire process involves up to ten craftsmen!

RIENZOME

Rienzome has been established in 1872 and beautifully crafts a variety of cotton textiles. From Tenugui, multi-purpose cotton towels that can be used as bandana, to wrap things or for decoration as wall tapestry; to Jinbei - Jinbei, a casual clothing for kids that can be used indoors or as pyjama. Noren curtains are dividers that hang at the entrance of a building or between rooms. And their scarves are popular year-round for their softness and traditional designs. 

Chusen Dyeing

Rienzome uses the ‘Chusen’ dying method, which is a hand dying technique that results in an intense print visible equally on both sides of the cloth, whereas printed versions will have one good- and one bad side. 

First of all, the fabric’s pattern will be drawn and carefully carved out on a special stencil paper. A bleach specialist is required to prepare the cotton cloths to get painted. 

It requires a mixture of seaweed and starch that helps keep the parts of cloth that do not need to be colored, clean. Several layers of cloth are painted at the same time, which means the artisan needs to be very careful, as once he makes a mistake, the entire roll of cloth will be wasted.  The starch-seaweed mixture is applied on each new layer and is also used to creates small dams around different areas where the paint with get captured in order to color patterns and decorations. 

Then, heated dye is released on top of the cloth and should only cover the parts left uncovered with the starch mixture. 

Craftsman often pour using a water can and with two hands at the same time! A vacuum below the cloth, operated with a foot pump, will pump all the paint down, allowing multiple layers to be dyed at once. The cloth then needs to be turned around so that the process can be repeated on the other side. Craftsman have to be extremely precise throughout the entire crafting process in order for the final result to be successful.

Finally, the painted cloths are washed in water to remove all the starch, left to sundry and rolled with a machine to remove all the wrinkles.  The cloth is then cut in smaller pieces depending on its intended use as tenugui towel or clothing.