Ehikodi Thelma
Adire is a resist-dyed cloth produced
and worn by the Yoruba people of southwestern Nigeria West Africa. The
Yoruba label ‘Adire’, which means “tied and dyed,” was first applied to
indigo-dyed cloth decorated with resist patterns around the turn of the
twentieth century.
Adire-oniko |
With the introduction of a broader
color palette of imported synthetic dyes in the second half of the twentieth
century, the label “Adire” was expanded to include a variety of hand-dyed
textiles using wax resist batik methods to produce patterned cloth in a
dazzling array of dye tints and hues. As a distinctive textile type, Adire
first emerged in the city of Abeokuta, a center for cotton production, weaving,
and indigo-dyeing in the nineteenth century. The prototype was tie-dyed kijipa,
a hand-woven cloth dyed with indigo for use as wrappers and covering cloths.
Female specialists dyed yarns and cloth and also refurbished faded clothing by
re-dyeing the cloth with tie-dyed patterns.
When British trading firms introduced
cheap imported cloth and flooded the market with colorful inexpensive printed
textiles, the Adire industry emerged to meet the challenge. The women
discovered that the imported white cotton shirting was cheaper than handwoven
cloth and could be decorated and dyed to meet local tastes. The soft, smooth
texture of the import cloth, in contrast to the rough surface of kijipa cloth,
provided a new impetus for decoration. The soft shirting encouraged the
decorators to create smaller more precise patterns with tie-dye methods and to
use raffia thread to produce finely patterned stitch-resist Adire Alabere. The
smooth surface of shirting led to the development of hand-painted starch-resist
Adire Eleko. Abeokuta remained the major producer and trade center for Adire,
but Ibadan, a larger city to the north, developed a nucleus of women artists
who specialized in hand-painted Adire Eleko. The wrapper design Ibadandun
(“Ibadandun” meaning “the city of Ibadan is sweet”) is popular to this day.
In the early decades of the twentieth
century, a vast trade network for Adire spread across West Africa. Adire
wrappers were sold as far away as Ghana, Senegal, and the Congo. At the height
of Adire production in the 1920s, Senegalese merchants came to Abeokuta to buy
as many as 2,000 wrappers in one day from the female traders. In the
twenty-first century, the new colorful Adire continues to meet fashion
challenges and to be an alternative to machine prints. In continually changing
patterns, new Adire appeals to the fashion-conscious Yoruba in the urban and
rural areas. In Nigeria one can still buy indigo-dyed Adire-oniko and eleko
made by older women in Abeokuta and Ibadan and by artisans at the Nike Center
for the Arts and Culture in Oshogbo where the artist Nike Davies-Okundaye
trains students in traditional Adire techniques.
Mrs. Akpino, who resides in Abeokuta
and a professional in the making of Adire, teaches that Adire can be made in
two ways. "Tie and Dye popularly called “Adire” can be made in two ways. The
first is the Batik Style. This involves drawing patterns on foam or wooden
plate which will be immersed into hot candle. The candle must not be too hot
and not too cold, and then the foam or wooden pattern will be imprinted on the
cloth. Afterwards the patterned cloth will be dipped into mixed dye which would
have been measured and mixed according to the quantity of cloth. Then the cloth
is removed from the dye solution and dried for a while before being immersed
again into hot water so as to remove the candle wax completely from the cloth. The
second method is the tye and dye method which in Yoruba language is called
Adire-Oniko. Adire-Oniko is tied or
wrapped with raffia into to form various patterns. Afterwards, the tied cloth
is immersed into dye solution. Once the dye has penetrated enough into the
cloth, the cloth is removed from the solution, rinsed thoroughly, starched and
dried." The traditional production of Adire involves the input of two female specialists—dyers (Alaro), who control production and marketing of Adire, and decorators (Aladire), who create the resist patterns and also markets the finished products.
Production of Adire-oniko |
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