| Textile
Resources
Home Page -here
Indigo gallery - view
indigo fabrics we have for sale here

Adire gallery - view
Yoruba indigo resist dyed cloths we have for sale here

Indigo Links:
"Afrique
Bleue" - French indigo exhibit
Social
Fabric - Denver Museum of Anthropology
Ibile
Indigo House
Indigo dye
pits at Kofar Mata, Kano
Indigo
dyeing in Labé, Guinea
Indigo References:
Balfour-Paul, J. Indigo
(1998)
Bouilloc, C et.al.
Afrique Bleue: les routes de l'indigo (2000) - exhibition catalogue
Gillow, J. Printed and
Dyed Textiles from Africa (2001)
Annie Ringuedé ,
Anne-Chantal Gravellini Bleus et ocres de Guinée, (Sepia,
2005)
Also check the
references on our adire introduction page here
Nigerian Women's
Weaving gallery - click the image below

Blue and
white kente gallery - click the image below

(c)Duncan Clarke, Version
1/01/2003 |
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Indigo
was the foundation of numerous textile traditions throughout
West Africa. For centuries before the introduction of synthetic
dyes the ability to transform everyday white cotton into prized
deep blue cloth was a mysterious and highly valuable skill
passed on by specialist dyers from generation to generation. From
the Tuareg nomads of the Sahara to the grassland kingdoms of
Cameroon, indigo cloth signified wealth, abundance and
fertility. A century ago blue and white striped cloth was the
normal attire across a vast area from Senegal to Cameroon, while
numerous traditions of "shibori" type resist pattern dyeing flourished. Appropriately it was women who dyed cloth with indigo
in most areas, with the Yoruba of Nigeria and the Manding of
Mali (especially the Soninke /Malinke) particularly well known
for their expertise. Yoruba dyers paid tribute to a patron
deity, Iya Mapo to ensure the success of the complex dye
process. Among the Hausa, where the export trade in prestige
textiles was highly organised, male dyers working at communal dye pits
were the basis of the wealth of the ancient city of Kano.

"Malinke
dyers" old postcard, photograph taken by Edmund Fortier in
the Futa Jallon region of Guinee in 1905. Note the use of a half
buried pot as the dye vessel, and, at the left, a woman beating
folded cloth to impart a glazed sheen.
Indigo in
West Africa was obtained from local plant sources, either indigofera
or lonchocarpus cyanescans. Transforming the raw
material into a successful dye vat was a complex process
requiring great expertise and liable to un-explained failure.
Inevitably it was usually surrounded with ritual prescriptions
and prohibitions. The primary ingredients were dried balls of
crushed leaves from indigo bearing plants, ash, and the dried
residue from old vats. Cloth had to be dipped repeatedly in the
fermented dye, exposed briefly to the air, then re-immersed. The
number of dippings, and the strength and freshness of the
dye determined the intensity of the resulting colour. After the
dyed cloth had dried it was customary to beat the fabric
repeatedly with wooden beaters, which both pressed the fabric
and imparted a shiny glaze. In some areas additional indigo
paste was beaten into the cloth at this stage, subsequently
rubbing off on the skin of the wearer in a much desired effect.

"Mossi
indigo dyers (Upper Volta" old postcard, early C20th. As
with the Hausa in Nigeria indigo dyeing among the Mossi in what
is now Burkina Faso was a male occupation. Note the thatched
covers for the buried dye pits.
Today synthetic
indigo and brightly coloured imported fabrics have largely
displaced natural indigo except in remote regions and only in a few areas
can one still
see indigo cloths in regular use. For many cloths like those in
our galleries dating from the mid-twentieth century represent the
last remainders of a long tradition. Elsewhere though natural
indigo continues to be used, for example by Dogon women in Mali
and Mossi and Dioula in Burkina Faso. We have three
selections of indigo dyed textiles, in our main indigo gallery,
our Nigerian adire resist dyed gallery, and in our Nigerian
women's gallery. There is also a selection of blue and white
kente from Ghana. Follow the links at the left.
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