photos by Styrous®
In 1988 and then again later in 1990, I produced a series of
fashion shows that featured fabrics of the
Japanese fabric designer,
Junichi Arai, for the legendary
art-to-wear boutique,
Obiko. Owner/operator
Sandra Sakata gave the designers she featured in her boutique many different Arai fabrics to design whatever garment the fabric inspired them to create. The fashion shows were benefits for The
San Francisco Museum of Craft & Folk Art at
Fort Mason in
San Francisco,
California. The museum closed in 2012.
There were scraps of fabric left over from one of the garments and the designer made a tie for me from one of the scraps. Arai’s fabrics were used only in women’s fashion so it’s possible I have the only male article of clothing made of his fabric. I believe there are
titanium threads in my tie.
The fabrics Arai produced were
astonishing. Arai had learned historical
Japanese weaving techniques for
obis and
kimonos and in 1984 he founded the
Nuno Corporation, a company and retailer wholly devoted to fabric – combining old practices with new technologies and materials in innovative and unexpected ways.
Arai was born in 1932 in the city of
Kiryu,
Japan, where production of
silk weaving textiles has been a tradition for over 1,000 years. He is the sixth generation of a mill-owning family.
The Junichi Arai fabric tie is for sale on eBay
Styrous® ~ Wednesday, September 30, 2015
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