Difference between revisions of "Category:Madder: Ukiyo-e colorant"

From CAMEO
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 2: Line 2:
  
 
[[Madder]] - akane
 
[[Madder]] - akane
 +
 
A natural red dye extracted from the roots of any of several species of the genus ''Rubia''. The most commonly used plants include: ''Rubia tinctorum'' L., native to the Middle East and eastern Mediterranean, but cultivated across Europe and introduced into the Far East, America, and Africa; ''Rubia cordifolia'' L., native to India and southeast Asia, but very widespread; and ''Rubia akane'' Nagai, found in Japan and also China, Korea and Taiwan. Madder has been used as a colorant for dyeing textiles since ancient times in India, Persia, and Egypt.
 
A natural red dye extracted from the roots of any of several species of the genus ''Rubia''. The most commonly used plants include: ''Rubia tinctorum'' L., native to the Middle East and eastern Mediterranean, but cultivated across Europe and introduced into the Far East, America, and Africa; ''Rubia cordifolia'' L., native to India and southeast Asia, but very widespread; and ''Rubia akane'' Nagai, found in Japan and also China, Korea and Taiwan. Madder has been used as a colorant for dyeing textiles since ancient times in India, Persia, and Egypt.
  

Revision as of 12:32, 28 April 2020

For ukiyo-e woodblock prints, Rubia tinctorum and/or Rubia akane was the primary red colorant used consistently for all of the time periods and printing methods.

Madder - akane

A natural red dye extracted from the roots of any of several species of the genus Rubia. The most commonly used plants include: Rubia tinctorum L., native to the Middle East and eastern Mediterranean, but cultivated across Europe and introduced into the Far East, America, and Africa; Rubia cordifolia L., native to India and southeast Asia, but very widespread; and Rubia akane Nagai, found in Japan and also China, Korea and Taiwan. Madder has been used as a colorant for dyeing textiles since ancient times in India, Persia, and Egypt.

Red regions containing madder were usually seen as brightly fluorescent during the preliminary examination of the prints with a hand-held UV light. Thus, it was no surprise that the EEM fluorescence technique provided a unique and definitive pattern for madder, but it was fortunate for our study, that the madder pattern was distinctively different than the EEM pattern for safflower

Pages in category "Madder: Ukiyo-e colorant"

The following 80 pages are in this category, out of 80 total.

K