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This silk kimono demonstrates the sophisticated artistry of Japanese shibori dyeing techniques, featuring an elegant bamboo motif that carries deep cultural significance. The garment possesses a distinctive pattern of stylized bamboo stalks rendered in rich reddish-brown tones against a subtle dotted background, creating diagonal compositions that flow gracefully across the fabric. The bamboo is depicted with characteristic segmented joints and delicate leaves, executed through resist-dyeing methods that produce the organic, slightly irregular lines typical of shibori work.
The detail images reveal the intricate detail of the textile's surface, showing how the shibori technique creates varying intensities of color saturation in purple and turquoise tones. The bamboo motif holds profound symbolism in Japanese culture, representing resilience, flexibility, and moral integrity - qualities highly valued in Japanese aesthetics and philosophy. The bamboo's ability to bend without breaking made it a popular metaphor for enduring strength through adversity. This period of the kimono's creation coincides with Japan's complex relationship between traditional crafts and modernizing influences, and the sophisticated geometric interpretation of the bamboo suggests possible influence from the broader Art Deco movement that was affecting decorative arts globally during the 1920s and 1930s. The shibori technique itself, with its emphasis on controlled chance and the beauty of imperfection, embodies the Japanese aesthetic principle of wabi-sabi while creating patterns that feel both ancient and surprisingly contemporary.
Its measurements are 50 inches (125 cm) from sleeve-end to sleeve-end and 60 inches (151 cm) in height.