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Tapestry Weaving(¸ïË¿»ò¿ÌË¿ Kesi)
It is done on a wooden handloom with raw silk as the warp and boiled-off silk as the weft. The weft threads are usually of dozens of colors and are separately reeled in many small shuttles. First the artisan makes on the warp a sketchy drawing of the pattern to be woven and then guides a shuttle with the weft thread of a specified color across the warp threads---almost never throughout the entire width but only where that particular color is needed. So, this is a form of weaving patch by patch. One could also say it represents an integration of the skills of silk-weaving and painting. It is necessary to make frequent changes of the shuttles (I.e. threads of different colors), and a small piece of work requires thousands of changes to finish.
The art has its beginnings in the Han and Wei dynasties but blossomed during the Song (960-1279), producing a great master in Zhu Kerou. The picture of Ducklings Lotus Pond woven by him, now kept in the ShanghaiMuseum, is considered a national treasure. The art of kesi was introduced to Japan during the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644). The belt for the Japanese kimoni, which is woven in this way, is still called by the Japanese¡± Chinese Ming decorative belt¡±.
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