Traditional Fish Leather Dyeing Methods with Indigenous Arctic Plants

Heritage Pub Date : 2024-07-11 DOI:10.3390/heritage7070173
Elisa Palomino, Lotta Rahme, Katrín María Káradóttir, Mitsuhiro Kokita, Sigmundur Páll Freysteinsson
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Abstract

Along the Arctic and sub-Arctic coasts of Alaska, Siberia, north-eastern China, Hokkaido, Scandinavia and Iceland, people have dressed in clothes or worn shoes made of fish skin for millennia. (Within this article, the terms fish skin and fish leather are used to indicate different processes of the same material. Fish skin: Skin indicates the superficial dermis of an animal. Fish skin is referred to as the historical raw material that is tanned following traditional methods such as mechanical, oiling and smoking tanning, using materials such as bark, brain, urine, fish eggs and corn flour. Fish leather is used to refer that the fish skin has passed one or more stages of industrial vegetable or chrome tanning production and is ready to be used to produce leather goods). These items are often decorated with a rich colour palette of natural dyes provided by nature. In this study, minerals and raw materials of plant origin were collected from riverbanks and processed by Arctic seamstresses who operated as designers, biochemists, zoologists, and climatologists simultaneously. During our research, an international team of fashion, tanning and education specialists used local Arctic and sub-Arctic flora from Sweden, Iceland, and Japan to dye fish leather. Several plants were gathered and sampled on a small scale to test the process and determine the colours they generated based on the historical literature and verbal advice from local experts. This paper describes the process and illustrates the historical use of natural dyes by the Arctic groups originally involved in this craft, building on the traditional cultural heritage that has enabled us to develop sustainable dyeing processes. The results are promising and confirm the applicability of these local plants for dyeing fish skins, providing a basis for a range of natural dye colours from local Arctic flora. The aim is to develop a moderate-sized industrial production of fish leather in this colour palette to replace current unsustainable chemical dyeing processes. This project represents an innovation in material design driven by traditional technologies, addressing changes in interactions between humans and with our environment. The results indicate that new materials, processes, and techniques are often the fruitful marriage of fashion and historical research of traditional methods, helping the industry move towards a more sustainable future.
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利用北极本土植物进行传统鱼皮染色的方法
在阿拉斯加、西伯利亚、中国东北部、北海道、斯堪的纳维亚半岛和冰岛的北极和亚北极沿岸,人们穿着鱼皮制成的衣服或鞋子已有千年历史。(在本文中,"鱼皮 "和 "鱼皮 "是指同一种材料的不同加工工艺。鱼皮:皮肤是指动物的表皮。鱼皮是一种历史悠久的原材料,使用树皮、脑、尿、鱼卵和玉米粉等材料,通过机械鞣、上油鞣和烟熏鞣等传统方法进行鞣制。鱼皮指的是鱼皮经过一个或多个阶段的植物或铬鞣工业化生产后,可以用来制作皮革制品)。这些物品通常使用大自然提供的天然染料进行装饰,色彩丰富。在这项研究中,我们从河岸收集了源自植物的矿物质和原材料,并由同时身兼设计师、生物化学家、动物学家和气候学家的北极裁缝进行加工。在我们的研究过程中,一个由时装、制革和教育专家组成的国际团队利用来自瑞典、冰岛和日本的当地北极和亚北极植物为鱼皮染色。根据历史文献和当地专家的口头建议,我们收集了几种植物并进行了小规模采样,以测试该过程并确定它们产生的颜色。本文描述了这一过程,并说明了最初从事这一工艺的北极地区群体在历史上对天然染料的使用,这些传统文化遗产使我们能够开发可持续的染色工艺。结果很有希望,证实了这些当地植物对鱼皮染色的适用性,为从北极当地植物中提取一系列天然染料颜色奠定了基础。我们的目标是开发出适度规模的鱼皮染色工业产品,以取代目前不可持续的化学染色工艺。该项目代表了以传统技术为驱动力的材料设计创新,解决了人类与环境之间互动的变化问题。研究结果表明,新材料、新工艺和新技术往往是时尚与传统方法历史研究的结晶,有助于该行业走向更加可持续的未来。
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