
Chusen Indigo Dyed Tenugui
A hand towel dyed by hand, in a tradition that resists mechanisation.
Chū-sen is a dyeing technique developed in Osaka around 1887. Fabric is folded and stacked, dye poured from above into sections divided by paste-applied stencils, bleeding gently downward through the layers. The result is a gradation that no two pieces share exactly — soft at the boundaries, even on both sides, and entirely dependent on the artisan's judgement at each stage. The process lends itself to small runs, but not to machines.
The fabric itself is Tokuoka — a fine, densely woven bleached cotton with a smooth hand and a quiet firmness that softens with washing. The ends are left raw, as is traditional; any initial fraying will settle over time, or can be trimmed lightly with scissors if preferred.
Made in Japan.
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Chusen Indigo Dyed Tenugui
A hand towel dyed by hand, in a tradition that resists mechanisation.
Chū-sen is a dyeing technique developed in Osaka around 1887. Fabric is folded and stacked, dye poured from above into sections divided by paste-applied stencils, bleeding gently downward through the layers. The result is a gradation that no two pieces share exactly — soft at the boundaries, even on both sides, and entirely dependent on the artisan's judgement at each stage. The process lends itself to small runs, but not to machines.
The fabric itself is Tokuoka — a fine, densely woven bleached cotton with a smooth hand and a quiet firmness that softens with washing. The ends are left raw, as is traditional; any initial fraying will settle over time, or can be trimmed lightly with scissors if preferred.
Made in Japan.
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Description
A hand towel dyed by hand, in a tradition that resists mechanisation.
Chū-sen is a dyeing technique developed in Osaka around 1887. Fabric is folded and stacked, dye poured from above into sections divided by paste-applied stencils, bleeding gently downward through the layers. The result is a gradation that no two pieces share exactly — soft at the boundaries, even on both sides, and entirely dependent on the artisan's judgement at each stage. The process lends itself to small runs, but not to machines.
The fabric itself is Tokuoka — a fine, densely woven bleached cotton with a smooth hand and a quiet firmness that softens with washing. The ends are left raw, as is traditional; any initial fraying will settle over time, or can be trimmed lightly with scissors if preferred.
Made in Japan.


















