Chroma Cathay朱華
Aizome in Daily Life — Textile
01 / 06Textile

Aizome in Daily Life

Japan · indigo on the street

Indigo never stayed in the dye house. It walked out onto the street as shop curtains, signage, and summer cloth — and across those everyday surfaces it carries the full range of the vat, from the palest dip to the near-black of repeated immersion.

Aizome in Daily Life — THE NOREN
/ THE NOREN

INDIGO IS NOT ONE COLOR BUT A SEQUENCE — EACH IMMERSION DEEPENS THE CLOTH BY A NAMED DEGREE.

Hung at a shop entrance, a noren reads as a single blue — but the palette beside it is drawn from the Japanese Color Atlas as a graded family: ai-iro, the indigo of the dye tradition; kon-iro, the deep navy of repeated dipping; and asagi-iro, the pale blue-green of a single light bath. Every swatch links back to its source record.

Aizome in Daily Life — WORN AND HUNG
/ WORN AND HUNG

FROM THE DYE VAT TO THE YUKATA, THE SAME BLUE NAMES RECUR.

Worn as a yukata or printed with a white family crest by resist-dyeing, indigo cloth keeps the same vocabulary of named blues. The white of the crest is shironeri — refined white — set against the deep ground. A palette is a relationship, not a list.

Aizome in Daily Life — PROVENANCE
/ PROVENANCE

EACH TONE CARRIES A SOURCE STATUS, NOT A GUESS.

Hex values are screen approximations of historically attested color names — never claimed as exact colorimetry. This is the Chroma Cathay standard: source before style, across every atlas.

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