Maki-Age Shibori Tenugui
Maki-Age Shibori Tenugui
Maki-Age Shibori Tenugui

Takeda Kahei Shoten

Maki-Age Shibori Tenugui

Regular price $60

Hand-dyed with natural indigo using maki-age shibori in a fan motif, this stunning tenugui makes a perfect gift. Often described as a Japanese hand towel, tenugui are really so much more — they are used to wrap gifts, bentos, or sake bottles; as head or neck scarves; and even hung on the wall as decoration. 

Tenugui hold an important place in the history of Arimatsu shibori. Founded in 1608 along the Tokaido road, an important route connecting Kyoto with Edo (modern Tokyo), by Shokuro Takeda and a group of eight other villagers from a local cotton-growing region, Arimatsu quickly became known for selling tenugui to travelers. What started out as a simple, utilitarian item soon became elevated by Takeda and others' innovative new techniques for creating more complicated dye-resist patterns, and Arimatsu tenugui became sought-after omiyage for traveling daimyo. 

The Takeda family still produce hand-tied and dyed fabrics from their Edo-period home workshop, Takeda Kahei Shoten, located along the historic Tokaido road in Arimatsu.

Only 1 available
Handmade in Arimatsu, Japan
Cotton with natural indigo dye
38" long, 13" wide
Machine or hand wash cold with like colors, hang to dry