Chiyogami 727
Color:Pink
Pattern:Floral, Contemporary
Weight:70g
Size Imperial:24 x 36"
Size Metric:610 x 914 mm
About Chiyogami
HISTORY OF CHIYOGAMI
Originally produced as woodblock prints by papermakers during the 
farming season of the Edo period (1603-1867), Chiyogami was developed 
for decorative use in homes and interiors. Based on the bright kimono 
textiles of wealthy, fashionable ladies in larger cities that 
papermakers from the countryside admired. Textiles from Kyoto were 
especially inspiring as the area known as Yuzen had become famous for 
its sophistication in cloth dyeing techniques. Today’s Chiyogami is a 
widely popular decorative paper that is hand-printed by silkscreen in 
several small studios around Kyoto, Japan. 
Chiyogami was meant to be cut into pieces and made into flat paper 
dolls or pasted on tea tins or small paper boxes. Today the scale of the
 patterns is reminiscent of these early uses. Many of the traditional 
symbols depicted in the patterns refer back to seasonal motifs and 
auspicious occasions, when fancy kimonos would be worn: bamboo for 
flexibility; cranes for longevity; cherry blossoms for the fleeting 
nature of life; pine boughs for perseverance — these are just a few of 
the hundreds of traditional symbols printed in endless colours and 
captivating combinations.
PROCESS
Using high-quality, carefully-mixed pigment inks, the printers apply 
each colour one by one, using precise registration and alignment. A 
single pattern may have as many as 10 colours. Each colour is applied 
separately and dried before the next is pressed through the screen using
 a squeegee.
Japanese-made chiyogami is incomparable in quality in the world of 
printed papers. Intense, richly-pigmented inks, brilliant designs, 
extraordinary colour sensitivity, and printed with unparalleled 
precision to produce exceptional designs that are consistently one of 
the most popular and versatile types of decorative papers.
 
The range of Chiyogami patterns is endless, and Japanese designers today
 are tireless in their development of new, innovative patterns and 
designs. These patterns are constantly stocked at The Japanese Paper 
Place.

