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Bamboo weaving

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Japanese bamboo basket weaver working with kagome pattern (1915)

Bamboo weaving is a type of bambooworking in which two distinct sets of bamboo strips are interlaced at normally right angles to form an object. The longitudinal threads are called the warp and the lateral threads are the weft or filling. (Weft or woof is an old English word meaning "that which is woven".[a]) The method in which these strips are inter-woven affects the characteristics of the fabric.[1] Bamboo is usually woven by hand.

Especially in southeast Asia and east Asia through the natural abundance of bamboo as material did bamboo weaving develop since centuries.

Types

See also

References

  1. ^ Collier 1974, p. 92
  1. ^ deriving from an obsolete past participle of weave (Oxford English Dictionary, see "weft" and "weave".