|
Sport Science™ offers the only fully performance enhancing
tie-dye shirt available. We looked back to see how this came to be...
Tie-dye dates back to ancient times; some assume that in the story of
Joseph, in the Bible's Old Testament, his beautiful coat of many colors
could have been tie-dyed. The process became fully developed in China
during the T'ang dynasty (618-906 A.D.) and in Japan during the Nara
period (552-794 A.D.). These cultures tied and dyed the threads before
weaving their cloth - creating the method known today as ikat.
Later, from about 1568 to 1603 in many of the same eastern cultures,
tsujigahana reached its height. This is the art of combining tie-dye
with ornamental drawing.
Varied styles of tie-dye emerged to distinguish the different nations of
Africa and the Indian tie-dye technique of Bandhani is still practiced today.
Tie-dye first became popular in he U.S during the Roaring '20s. Pamphlets
were distributed that gave directions on how to decorate your home with
tie-dye and girls cut up cotton flour saks during the Great Depression
and tie-dyed them, sewing them into clothes or tablecloths.
Tie-dye came back to style in America in the 1960's when a movement
emerged among young people that emphasized individuality. People made
personal statements by tie-dying their clothes with their own color
combinations.
Since the 1980's, tie-dye has reemerged as a highly skilled and
labor-intensive art form and can be seen from the runways in Paris
and Milan to souvenir shops at popular beaches and tourist destinations.
|