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The Saori Story | |
| In Japan in the late 1960s, a woman named Misao Jo, then in her mid 50s, decided she wanted to weave a sash (obi) for her kimono by hand. Her husband and sons built her a handloom, and her 84-year-old mother taught her how to weave! However, Ms. Jo soon felt that her weaving in the conventional style was imitating the regularity and predictability of a machine. She said, "I have a brain and emotion. I'm a human being. I will weave an obi that is full of humanity." She allowed herself to skip threads in an unforced, rhythmic way, introducing unusual stripes and fringes that resulted in original work of striking expressiveness. She kept experimenting, enjoying herself to a degree that she hadn't believed possible, but wondering whether others would perceive her work as "really good." Finally, she brought her work to the owner of a fashionable kimono shop. To her surprise and delight, he bought all the work she showed him, sold it quickly, and asked for more. When she tried to fill his orders for a specific pattern she had made previously, however, she found that her joy in weaving was gone. Realizing that spontaneity was the secret of her success, she determined to teach this wonderful way to others. At age 92, she is still active in this movement today. | ||