EPISODE NOTES:
Though paper is not the first material for clothing we typically think of, it has been used to make garments going back centuries. This episode will explore the that long-lived tradition in Korea and Japan.
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Resources:
All Japan Handmade Washi Association. A Handbook on the Art of Washi: A Collection of Questions and Answers. All Japan Handmade Washi Association: Tokyo: 1991.
Kim, Yongsook. Lim, Hye-Won. "Hanji (Traditional Korean Paper) Fashions," in Berg Encyclopedia of World Dress and Fashion, Vol. 6, 2010.
Lee, Seung-chul. Hanji: Everything You Need to Know About Traditional Korean Paper. Seoul: Hyeonamsa, 2012.
Leitner, Christina. Paper Textiles. London: A & C Black Publishers, 2005.
Lim, Young-ju and Ki-Ho Sang. Hanji Craft Culture. Seoul: Daewonsa, 2002.
Mohajer va Pesaran, Daphne. 2018. “People and Placelessness: Paper Clothing in Japan.” Fashion Practice 10, no. 2 (June): 236–55.
Narita, Kiyofusa. 1954. A Life of Ts’ai Lung and Japanese Paper-Making. Tokyo: The Paper Museum.
Omura, Tomoko. 1999. “Konnyaku Paste and Kōzo.” The Journal for the Society for Washi Culture 7: 102–07.
Shim, Joon-young and Yongsook Kim. “A Study on the Development of Fashion Accessory Products Made with Korean Traditional Paper Hanji II.” Korean Journal of Human Ecology 15, no. 5 (2006): 803–809.
Yang, Sunny, and Rochelle Narasin. Textile Art of Japan. Shufunotomo:Tokyo, 2000.