Tanmono

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Tanmono

A tanmono (反物(たんもの)) is a bolt of traditional Japanese narrow-loomed cloth. It is used to make traditional Japanese clothes, textile room dividers, sails, and other traditional cloth items. Tanmono ("mono" is a placeholder name) are woven in units of tan, a traditional unit of measurement for cloth roughly analogous to the bolt, about 35–40 centimetres (14–16 in) by about 13 yards (12 m). One kimono takes one tan (ittan) of cloth to make. Tanmono are woven in the narrow widths most ergonomic for a single weaver (at a handloom without a flying shuttle). rdf:langString
rdf:langString Tanmono
xsd:integer 67908704
xsd:integer 1104353665
xsd:integer 30
rdf:langString * * * * * * * * * : ** Hemp ** Ramie or ** Flax * Silk * Cotton * Rayon * Polyester * , rag cloth, woven with bast fiber warp and cotton-rag weft.
rdf:langString * Woven patterns ** , solid indigo in varying shades ** , woven stripes ** , tartan cloth ** , a traditional Japanese ikat technique ** , a damask weave, geometric or figurative * Dyed-in-the-cloth techniques * , a traditional form of tie-dyeing ** , a revived form of tie-dyeing * Resist dyeing ** , a monochrome paste-resist technique ** , a polychrome paste-resist technique which sometimes uses whole-cloth stencils ** , a stencilled paste-resist technique, often repeating ** , wax-resist dyeing ** , stencil-cutting ** , a form of stencilled resist-dying traditional to Okinawa * Sewn patterns ** , traditional Japanese patchwork ** , a type of decorative stitching designed to reinforce fabric ** , a counted-stitch substyle of
rdf:langString June 2021
rdf:langString Not all of claim in source
rdf:langString A tanmono (反物(たんもの)) is a bolt of traditional Japanese narrow-loomed cloth. It is used to make traditional Japanese clothes, textile room dividers, sails, and other traditional cloth items. Tanmono ("mono" is a placeholder name) are woven in units of tan, a traditional unit of measurement for cloth roughly analogous to the bolt, about 35–40 centimetres (14–16 in) by about 13 yards (12 m). One kimono takes one tan (ittan) of cloth to make. Tanmono are woven in the narrow widths most ergonomic for a single weaver (at a handloom without a flying shuttle).
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 42295

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