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Cloth
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Use this durable and graphically elegant raffia panel as a table runner or simply adorn your wall with it.
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Use this fine, extremely durable cloth as a table runner, make pillows or mats, or simply adorn your wall.
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Use this durable and graphically elegant raffia cloth as a table runner or simply adorn your wall with it.
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Use this durable and graphically elegant raffia panel as a table runner or simply adorn your wall with it.
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Use this durable and graphically elegant embroidered raffia panel as a table runner or simply adorn your wall with it.
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Vintage Peruvian woven bands were used for skirt trims, but you can use them to accent clothing or embellish a special pillow cover.
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These Peruvian woven bands are used for skirt trims, but you can use them to accent clothing or embellish a special pillow cover.
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Use this special vintage Peruvian woven trim to accent clothing or embellish a special pillow cover.
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Use this Peruvian woven trim to accent a special jacket or to embellish a pillow cover.
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These pieced rectangles are samples of Ramu Devresh Harijan's product line and fine examples of block-printed fabrics. Use them to make place mats, pillow covers, or even your own throw!
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Use these distinctive, richly embroidered squares from the Shipibo of the Amazon region of Peru to cover pillows, insert into a jacket back, or mount on fabric for display.
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Use these unique, embroidered Shipibo squares to cover pillows, insert into a jacket back, or mount on fabric for display.
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Use these imaginative, unique Shipibo embroidered squares to cover pillows, insert into a jacket back, or mount on fabric for display.
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Complex linear fractal patterns are distinctive to the Shipibo women who design and make these colorful embroideries. Cotton fabric forms the base cloth that is then painted with the earthen clay slip from the Amazon region in Peru.
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Complex linear fractal patterns are distinctive to the Shipibo women who design and make these colorful embroideries. Use these squares to cover pillows, insert into a jacket back, or mount on fabric for display
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Complex linear fractal patterns are distinctive to the Shipibo women who design and make these colorful embroideries. Cotton fabric forms the base cloth that is then painted with the earthen clay slip from the Amazon region in Peru.
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Hand-stitched and hand-dyed, this cotton shibori fabric is durable and stylish.
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Hand-stitched and dyed in Japan, this cotton shibori fabric is durable and stylish.
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Display this vintage boro futon cover as a piece of contemporary art, or repurpose it as a home decor fabric.
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This beautiful sarong is so versatile that only your imagination limits its use. Wear it as a wrap skirt or dress your table with it!
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This beautiful sarong is so versatile that only your imagination limits its use. Wear it as a wrap skirt or dress your table with it!
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This traditional bandhani turban fabric is the original inspiration for printed bandanas.
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This indigo-dyed shibori cotton fabric is achieved by first drawing the outline of the pattern on the cloth, hand-stitching with needle and thread following the outline, pulling the thread tightly to create a resist for the pattern, and then dipping the cloth into the indigo dye vat multiple time to achieve the deep blue color. Once the dyeing is complete, the threads are clipped and the fabric opened to reveal the sweet little patterns that repeat throughout the cloth.
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This indigo-dyed shibori cotton fabric is achieved by first drawing the outline of the pattern on the cloth, hand-stitching with needle and thread following the outline, pulling the thread tightly to create a resist for the pattern, and then dipping the cloth into the indigo dye vat multiple time to achieve the deep blue color. Once the dyeing is complete, the threads are clipped and the fabric opened to reveal the sweet little patterns that repeat throughout the cloth.
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This indigo-dyed shibori cotton fabric is achieved by hand-stitching the patterns with needle and thread following the outline, pulling the thread tightly to create a resist for the pattern, and then dipping the cloth into the indigo dye vat multiple time to achieve the deep blue color. Once the dyeing is complete, the threads are clipped and the fabric opened to reveal the sweet little patterns that repeat throughout the cloth.
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