The first known use of indigo dye
This square of striped cotton, and a few others like it, represents
the first known instance of people using indigo to dye a textile blue.
The
ancient Peruvian fabric is more than 1,500 years older than the
earliest known Egyptian fabrics with indigo-dyed borders and 3,000 years
older than the first blue-dyed textiles in China, according to a study published this week in the journal Science Advances.
“It is possible it is the earliest known example of cloth
dyeing in the world,” said Jeffrey Splitstoser, a textile expert in the
department of anthropology at George Washington University. “I don’t
know of anything older.”..
The blue-tinged pieces of cloth were unearthed at Huaca Prieta, an
ancient ceremonial mound on the north coast of Peru that was occupied
between 14,500 and 4,000 years ago. Thousands of squares of the
prehistoric textiles have been found at the site. Splitstoser said he
has personally examined 800 of them...
The cloth pieces were not used for clothing because they had no arm,
leg or head holes, and the edges were not treated or hemmed the way you
would expect for even a simple item of clothing like a poncho, he said.
Instead, he suspects that they may have been used to carry items to the
site.
“If you got to the Andes today people will take a square of
fabric about the same size as what we saw, put whatever they want to
carry in the center and then wrap it up,” he said. “I think they were
carrying things in the bag to the temple and then ritually depositing or
using them there and leaving the textiles there as well.” ..
He added that the find is a little surprising because indigo is not
the most intuitive dye. Indigotin, the blue component in indigo, is not
soluble in water, so it’s not like you can just throw some Indigofera flowers
in a vat of boiling water and extract the dye. Instead, you have to
ferment the leaves, which turns the indigotin into another chemical that
is soluble in water, but is not blue.
“It’s actually kind of a
yellowish color,” he said. “In order to get the blue, you dip the
clothes in the water with the dissolved indigo molecule, then when you
pull it out it oxidizes, and that’s when it turns blue.”
Further details at the
Los Angeles Times.
Peru & China??? I thought that cannot be right. Nope it is correct. TIL indigo is both an old world and a new world plant. Who knew.
ReplyDelete"The indigo dye comes from a leguminous plant of the Indigofera genus, of which over three hundred species have been identified. Only two species are named frequently in the commercial history of the dye, namely: indigofera tinctoria (native to India and Asia) and indigofera suffructiosa (native to South and Central America)."