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

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== Description ==
 
  
[[Turmeric]] (suo): in progress
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[[File:SC207261.jpg|right|250px|link=Shigemasa, Bundle Tied with Straw; Calendar for 1815, 11.20149|Bundle Tied with Straw by Kitao Shigemasa]]
  
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<font size="3">'''[[Turmeric]]'''</font> 鬱金 (''ukon''): A yellow dye obtained from the root of the ''Curcuma longa'' (or ''C. domestica'') plant native to India.  The primary color component in turmeric is curcumin. Turmeric produces a bright deep yellow that has a high tinting strength. Turmeric made its way from Ryūkyū (Okinawa) and Siam (Thailand) through trade.
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Turmeric and [[:Category:Orpiment: Ukiyo-e colorant|orpiment]] have been the most commonly detected yellows as a single colorant or as a mixture of the two. In addition to mixtures with orpiment, turmeric was frequently overprinted or mixed with [[:Category:Dayflower: Ukiyo-e colorant|dayflower]] and [[:Category:Safflower: Ukiyo-e colorant|safflower]] to create [[:Category:Dayflower/Turmeric: Ukiyo-e colorant|green]] and [[:Category:Other Reds: Ukiyo-e colorant|orange]].
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'''For additional information see:''' [[Turmeric]], [[Turmeric (Curcuma longa) LC]], Uemura Dye Archive: [[Ukon (Turmeric) - center (20 C)|Turmeric 20]], [https://powo.science.kew.org/taxon/urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:796451-1 ''Curcuma longa'' (Kew)]
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<br>
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== Examples of Turmeric in Ukiyo-e Prints ==
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{| class="wikitable" style="display: inline-table;font-size:90%;text-align:center;width:15%"
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|[[File:11.19703-pt4-detail.png|200px|link=Harunobu, Parody of the Three Evening Poems: Teika, Jakuren, and Saigyô, 11.19703]]
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|-
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[[File:Indigo FORS.JPG|200px]]<br>[[Harunobu, Parody of the Three Evening Poems: Teika, Jakuren, and Saigyô, 11.19703|Pt 4: Printed<br>Suzuki Harunobu, 11.19703]]
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|}
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{| class="wikitable" style="display: inline-table;font-size:90%;text-align:center;width:15%"
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|[[File:46.1409-pt5-detail.png|200px|link=Kiyomitsu I, Actors Ôtani Hiroji III as Okabe no Rokuyata and Nakamura Sukegorô II as Inomata no Koheiroku, 46.1409]]
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|-
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[[File:Indigo FORS.JPG|200px]]<br>[[Kiyomitsu I, Actors Ôtani Hiroji III as Okabe no Rokuyata and Nakamura Sukegorô II as Inomata no Koheiroku, 46.1409|Pt 5: Printed<br>Torii Kiyomitsu I, 46.1409]]
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|}
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{| class="wikitable" style="display: inline-table;font-size:90%;text-align:center;width:15%"
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|[[File:11.20433-pt1-detail.png|200px|link=Hokusai, Dance of the Gods at the Heavenly Cave part 2, 11.20433]]
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|-
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[[File:Indigo FORS.JPG|200px]]<br>[[Hokusai, Dance of the Gods at the Heavenly Cave part 2, 11.20433|Pt 1: Printed<br>Katsushika Hokusai, 11.20433]]
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|}
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{| class="wikitable" style="display: inline-table;font-size:90%;text-align:center;width:15%"
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|[[File:11.20149-pt1-detail.png|200px|link=Shigemasa, Bundle Tied with Straw; Calendar for 1815, 11.20149]]
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|-
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[[File:Indigo FORS.JPG|200px]]<br>[[Shigemasa, Bundle Tied with Straw; Calendar for 1815, 11.20149|Pt 1: Printed<br>Kitao Shigemasa, 11.20149]]
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|}
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{| class="wikitable" style="display: inline-table;font-size:90%;text-align:center;width:15%"
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|[[File:11.25587-pt7-detail.png|200px|link=Eisen, Early Winter: The Day of the Boar in the Tenth Month, from the series Customs of the Four Seasons and Children at Play, 11.25587]]
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[[File:Indigo FORS.JPG|200px]]<br>[[Eisen, Early Winter: The Day of the Boar in the Tenth Month, from the series Customs of the Four Seasons and Children at Play, 11.25587|Pt 7: Printed<br>Keisai Eisen, 11.25587]]
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|}
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== Analysis ==
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Excitation Emission Matrix (EEM) spectroscopy can easily identify turmeric due to its high fluorescence and clear, consistent pattern. Another yellow colorant thought to have been traditionally used, [[Amur cork tree|Japanese yellow wood]] or ''kihada'' (黄檗) also fluoresces very brightly but produces a very different EEM pattern, making it easy to distinguish between the two materials. Yellow wood has not been detected so far.
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<gallery mode="packed" heights="200px" style="text-align: left">
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Turmeric EEM ref.jpg|<center>3D EEM plot for Turmeric</center>
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Yellow EEM plots.jpg|<center>3D EEM plots for Yellow references</center>
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</gallery>
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==Images of Turmeric ==
 
<gallery>
 
<gallery>
Sappsnwood trees.JPG|Sappanwood (''Caesalpinia sappan'')
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File:Turmeric plant.jpg|''Curcuma Longa''
File:brazilwood raw.jpg|Cut pieces of brazilwood (''Caesalpinia brasiliensis'')
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File:CurcumLonga_McBJul02040066.jpg|''Curcuma Longa'', <small>by National Tropical Botanical Garden</small>|link=https://ntbg.org/database/plants/detail/Curcuma-longa
File:Red bud_suo.jpg|Red bud
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File:13 Turmeric root_detail.jpg|Turmeric rhizomes
File:12 Sappanwood.jpg|Sappanwood, poowdered
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File:turmeric_pieces.jpg|Cut turmeric rhizomes
File:06_Brazilwood comp.jpg|Dye mixtures from brazilwood juice
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File:turmeric_powder.jpg|Ground turmeric
Sappanwood color.PNG|EEM Color
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File:turmeric.jpg|Paper dyed with turmeric
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File:NMAH-AHB2017q005550.jpg|Turmeric, <small>by National Museum of American History</small>|link=https://americanhistory.si.edu/collections/nmah_1323752
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File:OCxJeYTBz_A-HD.jpg|Turmeric processing (video), <small>by Foodtechwaale</small>|link=https://youtu.be/OCxJeYTBz_A</small>
 
</gallery>
 
</gallery>
  
== Examples ==
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==List of Prints ==
 
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Below is a list of prints where turmeric was detected.
[[Category:Ukiyo-e Colorants]]
 

Latest revision as of 22:22, 28 May 2024

Bundle Tied with Straw by Kitao Shigemasa

Turmeric 鬱金 (ukon): A yellow dye obtained from the root of the Curcuma longa (or C. domestica) plant native to India. The primary color component in turmeric is curcumin. Turmeric produces a bright deep yellow that has a high tinting strength. Turmeric made its way from Ryūkyū (Okinawa) and Siam (Thailand) through trade.

Turmeric and orpiment have been the most commonly detected yellows as a single colorant or as a mixture of the two. In addition to mixtures with orpiment, turmeric was frequently overprinted or mixed with dayflower and safflower to create green and orange.

For additional information see: Turmeric, Turmeric (Curcuma longa) LC, Uemura Dye Archive: Turmeric 20, Curcuma longa (Kew)

Examples of Turmeric in Ukiyo-e Prints

11.19703-pt4-detail.png

Indigo FORS.JPG
Pt 4: Printed
Suzuki Harunobu, 11.19703

46.1409-pt5-detail.png

Indigo FORS.JPG
Pt 5: Printed
Torii Kiyomitsu I, 46.1409

11.20433-pt1-detail.png

Indigo FORS.JPG
Pt 1: Printed
Katsushika Hokusai, 11.20433

11.20149-pt1-detail.png

Indigo FORS.JPG
Pt 1: Printed
Kitao Shigemasa, 11.20149

11.25587-pt7-detail.png

Indigo FORS.JPG
Pt 7: Printed
Keisai Eisen, 11.25587

Analysis

Excitation Emission Matrix (EEM) spectroscopy can easily identify turmeric due to its high fluorescence and clear, consistent pattern. Another yellow colorant thought to have been traditionally used, Japanese yellow wood or kihada (黄檗) also fluoresces very brightly but produces a very different EEM pattern, making it easy to distinguish between the two materials. Yellow wood has not been detected so far.

Images of Turmeric

List of Prints

Below is a list of prints where turmeric was detected.

Pages in category "Turmeric: Ukiyo-e colorant"

The following 56 pages are in this category, out of 56 total.

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