@innprintt: History of the yoruba Adire. Adire is the name given to indigo dyed cloth produced by Yoruba women of south western Nigeria using a variety of resist dye techniques. Adire translates as tie and dye, and the earliest cloths were probably simple tied designs on locally-woven hand-spun cotton cloth much like those still produced in Mali. In the early decades of the twentieth century however, the new access to large quantities of imported shirting material made possible by the spread of European textile merchants in certain Yoruba towns, notably Abeokuta, enabled women dyers to become both artists and entrepreneurs in a booming new medium. New techniques of resist dyeing were developed, most notably the practice of hand-painting designs on the cloth with a cassava starch paste prior to dyeing. This was known as adire eleko. Alongside these a new style was soon developed that accelerated decoration by using metal stencils cut from the sheets of tin that lined tea-chests. Another method was to use sewn raffia, sometimes in combination with tied sections, while other cloths were simply folded repeatedly and tied or stitched in place. The basic shape of the cloth is that of two pieces of shirting material stitched together to create a women’s wrapper cloth. Most of the designs were named, and popular designs included the jubilee pattern, (first produced for the jubilee of George V and Queen Mary in 1935), Olokun or “goddess of the sea”, and Ibadadun “Ibadan is sweet.”#targetaudience #westafrica #nigeriantiktok #adire #yoruba
Imprint
Region: US
Tuesday 16 June 2026 18:18:16 GMT
Music
Download
Comments
:
Umm some of these are the Cameroonian Bamileke clothing they are the same color but the patterns are very significant to each tribes’ own
2026-06-16 21:07:55
51
moyosore :
I was JUST thinking about Adire the other day. When I was in school in Nigeria, we had Batik classes, where we learnt some of the Yoruba techniques to create our own fabrics, using wax, rope and dye. what a time 🩵
2026-06-17 20:21:44
5
TOO TIRED :
This reminds me of Elukami! Something we do down south with indigo cultivation 🥰🖤
2026-06-17 21:25:13
6
emmasinterlud3 :
Reminds me a bit of haunt blue in the south
2026-06-16 20:25:36
50
ọmọbirin𝜗𝜚 :
I LOVEEE ADIRE!
2026-06-17 00:17:55
23
nysf_brooklyn :
I need this 🔥🖤👑
2026-06-17 19:29:57
2
⭐ :
i fell in love with the color blue when i first saw this, its so beautiful.
2026-06-16 18:26:51
16
Not here :
Soo beautiful
2026-06-17 05:15:52
3
yorùbá theorist ୨୧ :
love this 🥰
2026-06-17 09:17:59
2
🎀🦢 :
This is beautiful 💙
2026-06-16 18:50:13
6
Mystic words :
Everything is so beautiful
2026-06-17 16:23:07
2
captaincrunchos :
Remind me of Fula and banker attire a bit 🫶🏾
2026-06-17 06:22:04
3
mariama :
looks like leppi lowkey
2026-06-17 06:36:56
2
Yorùbá :
Yorùbá women are the blueprint!
2026-06-17 04:39:42
1
maija :
This reminds me of Soulaan culture
2026-06-17 22:53:55
0
chan🔻 :
I feel this has a connection to indigo cultivation and southern black americans
2026-06-16 18:54:57
144
•°Sammy wammy°• 🇵🇸 :
In moonlight black boys are blue
2026-06-17 08:02:23
2
To see more videos from user @innprintt, please go to the Tikwm
homepage.