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

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[[File:Indigo FORS.JPG|x200px]]<br>[[Toyonobu, Rain in the Fifth Month, 11.19048|Rain in the Fifth Month by Ishikawa Toyonobu]]
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[[File:Indigo FORS.JPG|200px]]<br>[[Toyonobu, Rain in the Fifth Month, 11.19048|Rain in the Fifth Month by Ishikawa Toyonobu]]
 
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[[File:11.17904-pt5EEM.png|x200px]]<br>[[Eisen, Seijûrô and Onatsu; Banners of Bishamonten; from the series Amusements on the Festival Day, 11.17904|Seijûrô and Onatsu... by Keisai Eisen]]
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==List of Prints ==
 
==List of Prints ==
Below is a list of prints where safflower was detected as a single colorant or as part of a mixture.
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Below is a list of prints where safflower was detected.
 
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== Examples of Safflower in Ukiyo-e Prints ==
 
== Examples of Safflower in Ukiyo-e Prints ==

Revision as of 17:06, 15 July 2020

Actor Sawamura Tanosuke II by Utagawa Kunisada

Safflower 紅花(benibana): An organic red obtained from the florets of Carthamus tinctorius, it produces a wide range of tones from pale pink to red. The florets are picked, washed, massaged, and fermented to create safflower cakes (紅餅 beni mochi) from which the red dye can be extracted later. Dried florets can also be used to extract the dye directly. The florets are first washed with water to remove non-lightfast yellow chromophors including several quinochalcones. The red colorant, primarily carthamin, is then extracted in an alkaline solution. Safflower was grown throughout Japan during the Edo period for use as a cosmetic and food dye. The area of Yamagata was known as a producer of high quality benibana and still produces it today.

Safflower can appear as a pale pink, such as the delicate pink used to depict subtle eye shadow or blush effects as well as deeper reds. Safflower was noted to be an expensive colorant and often required multiple printings to achieve darker colors. Safflower and madder are the most commonly found reds before the introduction of aniline dyes in the 1860's. Red safflower and madder are found as a single colorant or as a mixture of the two. Although the visual difference between red safflower or madder used alone and a mixture of the two is currently difficult to discern, madder may have been used to extend the safflower. Safflower is most commonly mixed with dayflower to produce purple. The safflower and dayflower combination is continuously detected even after the introduction of synthetic colorants such as Prussian blue and aniline dyes, which seems to indicate that the tone obtained by the two was preferred over other possible mixtures of reds and blues.

For more information see: Safflower, Safflower (Carthamus tinctorius) LC

Examples of Safflower in Ukiyo-e Prints

Dyed indigo.jpg

11.13297-pt5eem.png
Actor Ogino Izaburo I... by Torii Kiyomasu

Dyed indigo.jpg

Indigo FORS.JPG
Rain in the Fifth Month by Ishikawa Toyonobu

Dyed indigo.jpg

Indigo FORS.JPG
Nishikigi of the Kanaya... by Suzuki Harunobu

Dyed indigo.jpg

Indigo FORS.JPG
Actors Ichikawa Danjûrô V... by Katsukawa Shunko

Dyed indigo.jpg

Indigo FORS.JPG
Actor Sawamura Tanosuke II... by Torii Kunisada

Dyed indigo.jpg

11.17904-pt5EEM.png
Seijûrô and Onatsu... by Keisai Eisen

Analysis

Excitation Emission Matrix (EEM) spectroscopy can easily identify the organic reds: safflower, madder, and sappanwood. Safflower fluoresces under UVA radiation and produces a unique EEM plot, even when the safflower has visually faded to a dull brownish red. In addition to the fluorescence for the red chromophor, the pattern often contained an additional peak for the yellow chromophore that was supposedly removed in the preparation of the red colorant but often needed several washings for complete elimination.



Other Images of Safflower

List of Prints

Below is a list of prints where safflower was detected.

Pages in category "Safflower: Ukiyo-e colorant"

The following 55 pages are in this category, out of 55 total.

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