Traditional costume of China’s Buyi ethnic group embraces revival through innovation
Speaking
of the Buyi ethnic group in southwest China’s Guizhou province, the first thing
that comes into people’s mind is its traditional and unique ethnic costumes.
Ceheng,
a county lying on the southwestern corner of Guizhou province, is the
largest area inhabited by the Buyi ethnic group
in China. It is also the place where Nanpanjiang River and Beipanjiang River meet.
Living in such a hot and humid climate, the local people regard homespun
clothing as the
first choice as it is comfortable to wear.
40-year-old
Huang Lian has been helping her mother make clothes since
childhood. As an experienced clothes maker, she has won multiple awards in costume
contests.
“We
use a wooden spinning wheel to make yarn, a loom to weave cloth and indigo
to dye the cloth,” Huang introduced. “The most complicated part is dyeing
with indigo, which takes a number of procedures and about 20
days to finish,” she added.
The
Buyi costumes, in different shades of
blue, are a representative project of national intangible
cultural heritage, and the blue clothes have become a symbol of the Buyi ethnic
group.
However,
clothes
dyed by the natural and traditional
technique lose
color. Though the dyestuff indigo doesn’t harm human skin, it affects the
marketing of the clothes, as few customers are willing to buy clothes that fade.
A
great opportunity happened in 2017, when a man named Long Zhiyu came to Ceheng
from Yunnan province. Long was very interested in Buyi dyeing and established a
company that manufactures Buyi clothes.
Long
invited experts from the school of textile science and engineering in Tiangong
University in north China’s Tianjin municipality, and after field investigations
and repeated experiments by the experts, the color-losing was no
more a problem.
“Before
dyeing, villagers always put something in the dye vat for a certain period of
time,” Long disclosed, explaining that this is similar to fermentation, during
which the bacteria grow to strengthen
the dyeing effects.
After
rounds of
screening and experimenting, the experts discovered a
bacterial strain with strong reducing capacity. “The bacterial strain could help
reduce
the dyeing process from more than 20 days to just
3 hours, and the color fastness is better,” Long said.
The
new technology has revitalized the ancient dyeing technique. But Long and his
team decided to go further. They divided the color of the cloth into 12 levels,
from light blue to dark blue, further refining the
dyeing technique.
“Recently,
we received orders placed from Japan and South Korea worth more than one
million yuan ,and we’ll deliver the goods soon,” said Long. After breaking through
the technological bottleneck, Long became more confident in the dyeing
and processing of the clothing.
“The
ethnic costumes, made from natural materials and environmental-friendly,
are very competitive in the international market,” Long introduced.
Supported by the new technology, Long’s
company established a relatively complete industrial chain.
“Under
an agreement we signed with indigo growers, our company provides indigo
saplings for the farmers to grow and purchase indigo leaves from them at a price no lower than the market price,” said Long, adding that this business
model has helped impoverished farmers increase income.
“Indigo
is a treasure plant. Its leaves could be used as
a dye and its root is a constituent of Radix Isatidis. This is why it’s
not a low-price product,” said Luo Chengsong, an
impoverished farmer whose net profit of every 667 square kilometers of indigo
field stood at 2,800 yuan. The man, who had planned to work outside town in the
past, finally decided to make a living in his hometown. Now he is planning to
increase the planting area of indigo trees by 0.2 hectares.
“At
least 66.67 hectares of indigo trees are needed each year by us for production,
and the figure keeps increasing,” said Long, expressing the hope that while facilitating
the development of the indigo industry, his company could lift more impoverished
households out of poverty and help them become well-off.
Photo
shows a senior woman of the Buyi ethnic group makes yarn
with a spinning wheel. Photo by Zhang Chunlei |
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