Japanese Indigo Boro Robe Plant Dyed Kimono
Description Boro is a traditional Japanese folk fabric, originally a garment always seen on thrifty farmers and fishermen. Due to the poverty of the working people, linen is generally used to make clothes, but linen is not as comfortable as cotton. People sew small pieces of cotton cloth into the lining of clothes or use them for repairs. This kind of fabric is continuously spliced and repaired from discarded cotton fabrics in the process of being passed down from generation to generation. It is like the Japanese version of American patchwork. It is often stitched together by hundreds of different indigo-dyed fabrics with rough needles and threads, but it has a sense of mutual fusion. The historical value, cultural value and artistic value contained in this traditional Japanese folk fabric make it an indispensable part of the world's clothing culture. The five kinds of patchwork on the neckline of the Taoist robe are all Japanese fabrics, which guarantees the maximum effect of BORO. Th