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Displaying Your African Textiles |

Photo Credit: www.NOVICA.com |
While some of us consider decorating
with African fabrics only during Kwanzaa or Black History Month,
remember that these unique pieces make beautiful home accents
year-round! Creating culturally relevant surroundings provides a
wonderful sense of tranquility, a retreat from the hectic pace of
the outside world.
Fabrics of all types, and West African textiles
especially, are my passion, including mudcloth, korhogo, adire,
adinkra and others. Ghana’s textile arts in particular are unique
to its culture, and the woven kente cloth is one of my favorite
creative decorating tools. Vibrantly colored strips are woven on a
narrow loom in widths of four to six inches, then sewn together to
form larger cloths. Kente is traditionally regarded as the cloth of
royalty, worn as a simply wrapped toga-style garment. Each pattern
and color combination conveys a particular meaning, or tells a
specific story. |
Authentic mudcloth
also continues to grow in popularity for home decor. The distinctive
patterns and colors of this handwoven cloth have inspired many
machine-made look-alikes, produced in West Africa and in other parts
of the world, but there’s nothing like the “real thing” to add
warmth and character to your living space.
Here are a few basic suggestions for displaying
your mudcloth, woven kente and other African fabrics. All of these
ideas allow you to keep the cloth intact so you can always use it
for another project later:
- Ladder display – As shown in the pages of African
Accents, I keep an assortment of my favorite African
textiles folded and tucked into the rungs of a wooden ladder
that I “rescued” from a garage. The ladder’s slightly
weathered appearance is the perfect complement for the various
pieces of mudcloth, kente, korhogo and kuba fabrics I’ve
collected. Every once in a while I change and rearrange the
pieces. The mix of colors and textures livens up the room, and
makes an excellent conversation piece.
- Headboard drape for the bed (SEE PHOTO) -- Fold
over about 4” across the top edge of the fabric and hem. Or,
sew tabs of a contrast fabric to the upper edge of the fabric.
Insert a decorative curtain rod that measures the width of your
bed (or for an earthier look, try a dried tree branch). Mount
the rod to the wall, at the same height a headboard would be
positioned.
- Single kente strips -- Wrap one around a solid
color throw pillow and secure it at the back with small hand
stitches. Tie a kente strip around a large vase or flower pot,
arranging the ends in a bow. In a formal dining room setting,
drape one kente strip across the back of each chair (like a
sash) for a regal look.
- I’ve also utilized kente strips as mat
borders in large picture frames.
- Wrap plain or not-so-new throw pillows with
vibrant fabrics as if wrapping a gift. Secure the ends at the
back with one or two safety pins. As an approximate guide, allow
˝ yard of fabric for a 14” pillow.
- Handstitch kuba
raffia to pillow fronts for a quick face-lift, or simply use
them as table toppers on a coffee table, nightstand or other
table.
Do-it-yourself decorators will find lots of other
ideas in the project books African Accents: Fabrics and Crafts to
Decorate Your Home and Global Expressions: Decorating with Fabrics
from Around the World. Various fabric techniques are profiled,
giving readers an understanding of their origins, traditional uses
and suggestions for contemporary usage along with extensive resource
listings. |
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Copyright ©2003-2006 Cultured Expressions, Inc. All rights
reserved.
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