Batik Overview & Map Weather Transportation Information
Batik is an ancient and distinguishing manual printing art popular among the minorities. Batik is the integration of encaustic and dye. Batik, wring printing, bandhnu are called the three printing techniques of ancient China.
History
The history of batik can be traced back to the Western Han Dynasty (206 BC-24 AD).
Batik used to be popular both in Central and Southwest China. Somehow the batik technique was lost in Central China, but it has been handed down from generation to generation among the ethnic people in Guizhou, a province in Southwest China. Nobody knows how batik was invented, but a folk tale about a "batik girl" tells us something about it. The story relates that long, long ago, there was a girl living in a stone village called Anshun, now a city in Guizhou Province. She was fond of dyeing white cloth blue and purple. One day, while she was working, a bee happened to alight on her cloth. After she took away the bee, she found there was a white dot left on the cloth, which looked very pretty. Her finding led to the use of wax in dyeing.
Character
The traditional batik designs are often evenly and harmoniously distributed on four sides. There are various patterns but in good order. The overall effect is stressed instead of paying too much attention to the details. The design patterns are of rhythmical beauty since the lines and points are orderly arranged. The peculiar batik ice line adds more charm to it. Apart from the traditional blue, there are many other colorful batik. The ice line is characteristic of batik. The formation of ice lines is that wax lines are destroyed in constant rolling and dyeing of the cloth, which soaks into the lines of the cloth, leaving natural patterns on the cloth. The natural patterns are enchantingly beautiful. Like fingerprints of human beings, they are different from each other, which further augment the depth of its beauty.
Batik in Chinese Ethnic Groups
Batik is used mostly in Chinese ethnic groups, here we will introduce batik in Miao and Chuang ethnic group.
Chuang Ethnic Minority
Batik of the Chuang is mainly in the pattern of white flowers blooming on the blue cloth, which is elegant and in good taste. The craftsmanship is not so difficult, but requires of high techniques. The raw materials used are mainly some local special products, such as the beeswax, white cloth, konjak, straw ash and indigo and so on. The procedures of producing the batik are firstly bleach the white cloth using the straw ash; secondly, paste the back of the white cloth; thirdly, rubdown the white cloth on the board after it is dry; fourthly, cut down the needed cloth according to certain size; finally, paint colorful pictures freely on the surface of the cloth using the wax spatula dipped with wax (the wax should first melt in the container using charcoal). After being painted, the waxed cloth will be put into the indigo and dipped for several times and then put into the boiling water in order to remove the beeswax. And a batik textile will be finally worked out after the cloth is dry.
Miao Ethnic Minority
The traditional way to make batik textiles of the Miao nationality is to paint various pictures on pieces of white cloth of different sizes using the specific wax spatula dipping the melted beeswax, dye the painted white cloth in the dye vet, then remove the beeswax from the dyed cloth in boiling water, rinse the cloth in clean water and dry it in the sun. After all these procedures, the batik cloth will be finally finished.