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How to Make a Boro Bag

Close up of boro bag

How to Make a Boro Bag: A Japanese Textile Tradition

A New Approach to Stitches

To appreciate sashiko stitches ("little stabs" or "little pierce" stitches) and boro clothes (meaning tattered or repaired), we need to put aside the idea of always trying to hide our stitches, and explore the elegance of having our construction be bold and in plain sight. Long, decorative reinforced thread can be incorporated into any number of fabrics that make up clothes, bedding, and accessories.

Boro Tradition

Boro is Yuyo-no-Bi, or the Beauty of Practicality, found in the traditional Japanese patchwork technique of piecing together and mending fabric.

Boro is a traditional Japanese form of repairing clothes, where layers upon layers of fabric and stitches make up a multi-layered patchworked piece of clothing, accessory, or bedding. Boro pieces were created from years-worth, even generations-worth, of repairs being made to a jacket or bedcover.

Japanese indigo cotton Boro jacket circa 1900. Image from https://www.kimonoboy.com

Before cotton was introduced in Japan, fabric was hand-made, hand-spun, and hand-dyed linen, hemp, and ramine. When a piece of clothing or bedding began to fall apart they would be pieced, patched, and stitched back together. Sashiko stitches would bind the many layers together, like a quilt.

Long running sashiko stitches traditionally give new life to cloth items, strengthening the fabric and adding warmth.

When clothes started to fall apart for good, and were beyond repair even with more layering and sashiko stitches, they’d be repurposed and turned into smaller items such as aprons, bags, and cleaning cloths.

Making a Boro Bag with Sashiko Stitches

Screen grab from Bebe Bold. Follow BeBe Bold on Facebook.

Making a boro bag is a great way to try out sashiko stitching - having fun pairing contrasting colored stitches throughout an item, making dramatic marks with thread that take on a life of their own.

You'll need some simple sewing items to start, which we've listed below with links to Amazon. You can also jump in and see some Sashiko Kits available for purchase online, or purchase some Sashiko items separately. (As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases - at no extra cost to you.) 

Having fun with new and traditional crafts, art, design, DIY, and freebies.

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BeBe Bold’s video instructions below are helpful in learning an easy way to create a Boro Bag. To get a download of Bebe Bold's pattern, you’ll need to go to the website and purchase it. 

If you’re a thrifty crafter or on a budget, you can follow directions, including a free pattern, from Indigobird Design, or from Fabrice Editions to make a loop bag, and adapt it to be a boro bag. 

Photo via Hanmadiya Japanese Boro Bag Tutorial

You can find a Japanese Boro Bag Tutorial with photos at Handmadiya.com, as well as .pdf downloadable step-by-step directions for another type of Boro Bag Tutorial via  London's Victoria & Albert Museum.

         · Don't miss: Sashiko Stitching and Sashiko Videos.

You can adapt bag projects to make a boro bag, using hand stitches (sashiko), machine stitching, or a combination of both. All People Quilt's messenger bag would look great as a boro bag - you'll have to create a free account to download free patterns.

If you want to see how boro tradition and techniques are inspiring contemporary designers, keeping traditional craftsmanship alive, have a look at Kapital and Kiriko.

Susan Briscoe Designs is a great place to start for putting together a sashiko kit. Click here for a one-stop convenient resource for needles, threads, fabric, books, patterns, and instructional videos.

For more about the Sashiko tradition and written tutorials, consider some helpful books we've curated below. 

SASHIKO, JAPANESE QUILTING, MENDING, and SLOW STITCHING BOOKS

The Ultimate Sashiko Sourcebook

The Ultimate Sashiko Sourcebook by Susan Briscoe Explore the origins of Sashiko, and what you need to get started. Ten project chapters show how easy it is to use sashiko patterns to make beautiful items for the home. *At the time of publishing, the price was $21.

Make and Mend: Sashiko-Inspired Embroidery Projects to Customize and Repair Textiles and Decorate Your Home

Make and Mend: Sashiko-Inspired Embroidery Projects to Customize and Repair Textiles and Decorate Your Home by Jessica Marquez

This book includes 15 projects, including mending clothes and home goods. *At the time of publishing, the price was $13.

Japanese Sashiko Inspirations: 25 Ways to Explore a Traditional Technique

Japanese Sashiko Inspirations: 25 Ways to Explore a Traditional Technique by Susan Briscoe

Experiment with 12 essential sashiko techniques. Each chapter includes a beginner's project,  and a more intricate design. *At time of publishing, the price was $22.

Japanese Quilting: Sashiko

Japanese Quilting: Sashiko by Hiromitsu Takano This book includes 30 designs, each accompanied by a full drawing, ranging from the Ougi (Fan) to Sayagata (Buddhist symbols). *At the time of publishing, the price was $19.

The Geometry of Hand-Sewing: A Romance in Stitches and Embroidery from Alabama Chanin and The School of Making (Alabama Studio)

The Geometry of Hand-Sewing by Natalie Chanin This book features more than 100 stitches—from the most basic straight and chain to the more fanciful feather and herringbone, with photos of both right and wrong sides. *At the time of publishing, the price was $17.

Japanese Country Quilting: Sashiko Patterns and Projects for Beginners

Japanese Country Quilting-Sashiko Patterns and Projects for Beginners by Karen Kim Matsunaga  Instructions for stitching patterns inspired by natural motifs, including 60 traditional patterns. *At time of publishing, the price was $24.

Sashiko Videos

Long white sashiko stitches on a quilt top

Sashiko Videos

Below are videos that support our post Sashiko Stitching.

First are Kimonomomo's 3-part tutorial on sashiko, followed by a video about handling and organizing sashiko thread.

The final video, from Sashi.co, instructs how to transfer a sashiko pattern to fabric.

   · Don't miss: You can find instructional sashiko books, threads, needles, and templates here. More books are listed below. [As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases (at no extra cost to you).]

Kimonomomo has an Etsy store that's chock full of gorgeous Japanese fabrics for sale. 

  · Don't miss more about Boro, Sashiko, and crafting materials: Sashiko Stitching, How to Make a Boro Bag, and Crafting Resources.

Below are book cover thumbnail pics of some best-selling books on sashiko,  the Slow Stitch Movement, varieties of stitches, and visible mending. Click through for more information or to purchase on Amazon, and have some fun! 

FOR YOUR LIBRARY

The Ultimate Sashiko Sourcebook

The Ultimate Sashiko Sourcebook by Susan Briscoe describes everything you need to begin sashiko stitching, and includes Ten project chapters.

Simple Sashiko: 8 Sashiko Sewing Projects for the Modern Home

Simple Sashiko: 8 Sashiko Sewing Projects for the Modern Home by Susan Briscoe. Projects include a tote bag, greetings cards, cushion, table mats, coaster, pocket hanging, and a long sampler.

The Geometry of Hand-Sewing: A Romance in Stitches and Embroidery from Alabama Chanin and The School of Making (Alabama Studio)

The Geometry of Hand Sewing by Natalie Chanin. Chanin presents instructions for more than 100 stitches—from the most basic straight and chain to the more fanciful feather and herringbone.

Mending Matters: Stitch, Patch, and Repair Your Favorite Denim & More

Mending Matters: Stitch, Patch and Repair Your Favorite Denim and More by Katrina Rodabaugh. Includes 20+ projects that showcase current trends in visible mending that are edgy, modern, and bold.

Japanese Quilting: Sashiko

Japanese Quilting: Sashiko by Hiromitsu Takano. A practical guide covering the basics, plus 30 designs [including Ougi (Fan), Ume (plum blossom), Shippu (seven treasures), and Sayagata (Buddhist symbols)], plus 10 projects. 

Visible Mending

Visible Mending: Artful Stitchery to Repair and Refresh Your Favorite Things by Jenny Wilding Cardon. Includes 35 examples of both hand-mending methods (boro, embroidery, patching, and darning), and machine mending.

Japanese Country Quilting: Sashiko Patterns and Projects for Beginners

Japanese Country Quilting: Sashiko Patterns and Projects for Beginners by Karen Kim Matsunaga. Step-by-step instructions for stitching patterns inspired by natural motifs, including 60 traditional patterns, and suggestions for basic sewing projects. 

Traditional Sashiko Inspirations

Japanese Sashiko Inspirations: 25 Ways to Explore a Traditional Technique by Susan Briscoe. 12 chapters cover essential sashiko techniques, and include beginner and intermediate level projects for each technique.

Make and Mend: Sashiko-Inspired Embroidery Projects to Customize and Repair Textiles and Decorate Your Home

Make and Mend: Sashiko-Inspired Embroidery Projects to Customize and Repair Textiles and Decorate Your Home by Jessica Marquez shows readers how to apply sashiko stitching to a variety of craft projects - repairing torn jeans, and making decorative pillows, napkins, a tablecloth, and a totebag.

Slow Stitch: Mindful and Contemplative Textile Art

Slow Stitch: Mindful and Contemplative Textile Art by Claire Wellesley-Smith introduces a range of ways in which you can slow your textile work down, including using hand-stitch techniques , and reusing and re-inventing materials.

Paradise Stitched

Paradise Stitched - Sashiko and Applique Quilts by Sylvia Pippen includes Hawaiian-inspired applique quilts with Sashiko directions and patterns. 

Stitch Fabric & Thread

Stitch, Fabric & Thread: An Inspirational Guide for Creative Stitchers by Elizabeth Healey includes 40 practical exercises, slow sewing ideas, and insights into sewing movements such as Boro textiles, Gee's Bend quilting, and Dorset buttons.

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