Sarasa with Small Rosettes 18th century India (Coromandel Coast), for the Japanese market The exceptional length of this cloth—more than seven feet—suggests its possible use as part of a waistband (obi). Indian sarasa was particularly popular in the Edo period (1615–1868) for obi and robe (kosode) linings. Although the fabric was made in India, the repeating pattern of regularly spaced rosettes and roundels was based on Japanese sources. The motifs evoke Japanese Buddhist iconography—the lotus and the wheel—as well as the traditional chrysanthemum. This type of design is present in late eighte


Sarasa with Small Rosettes 18th century India (Coromandel Coast), for the Japanese market The exceptional length of this cloth—more than seven feet—suggests its possible use as part of a waistband (obi). Indian sarasa was particularly popular in the Edo period (1615–1868) for obi and robe (kosode) linings. Although the fabric was made in India, the repeating pattern of regularly spaced rosettes and roundels was based on Japanese sources. The motifs evoke Japanese Buddhist iconography—the lotus and the wheel—as well as the traditional chrysanthemum. This type of design is present in late eighteenth-century Japanese sarasa manuals published in Edo and Kyoto. These manuals, with color directives that encouraged Japanese textile printers to copy the Indian designs, confirm that sarasa were widely circulated even before such publications no. 34. Sarasa with Small Rosettes 74424


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Photo credit: © MET/BOT / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
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