Furoshiki: beautiful, reusable wrappings

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Ranked #367 in Green, #44,515 overall

Wrappings for everything

Anything you can wrap in paper, you can wrap in cloth.

Japanese traditional cloth wrappings called furoshiki, are the greenest package wrapping you can get. Reusable, beautiful, environmentally friendly wrapping for food, gifts, for anything at all.

I'll show you how to make a furoshiki style tote for show and tell.

Furoshiki means 'bath spread' 

pronounced: f'-ROHSH-kee

In feudal Japan during the Edo period (1603 - 1868), they were used to bundle and protect people's clothing at public bath houses. Some historians think they could even date as far back as the Nara period (AD 710 - 794).

Before that, a furoshiki was known as hirazutsumi — a flat folded bundle.

As time passed, the furoshiki was used by merchants to transport their wares, and by people to protect and decorate a gift.

These days the cloths are used to tie up any parcel or package you can imagine.

Even baby can be carried on one's back in a furoshiki!

Reusable (green) gift wraps 

Furoshiki, friend to the environment


Image from Wikipedia

A Furoshiki is used for wrapping gifts 

but it has lots of other uses, too

Because there so many ingenious ways of folding a furoshiki, they make great shopping bags, gift wrap, shoulder bags, and my favourite — a quilt tote bag. I show you how to sew one further down the page.

Furoshiki are commonly used to wrap and carry lunch boxes (bento) and then they are used as a table mat for the lunch.

In daily life in Japan, these cloths are often employed for other household uses, such as:


as a tablecloth

for decorating the wall

instead of a shopping bag

for storing objects

as a scarf

for wearing as a sun-dress

cut into patches for quilts

A tradition has been reinvigorated 

no more plastic bags

When plastic shopping bags came, the use of furoshiki declined, but individuals are more environmentally aware nowadays.

Because of the threat plastic bags pose to wildlife and our ecology, people are again using furoshiki, and a tradition has been reinvigorated.

On March 6, 2006, the Japanese Minister of the Environment, Yuriko Koike, created a furoshiki cloth to promote its use in the modern world.

Traditional furoshiki back in style 

green wrappings

Japan Minister of Environment

In Focus: How to use "Furoshiki" [MOE]

Ms Yuriko Koike, Minister of the Environment, (pictured) has created the "Mottainai Furoshiki" as a symbol of Japanese culture to reduce waste.

What are these cloths made of? 

What size are they?

Modern furoshiki can be made of a variety of fabric types, including silk, crepe, cotton, rayon, and nylon, and are decorated with traditional designs or by shibori.

While there is no one set size, most furoshiki are around 18 to 20 inches square, have a printed design in one corner, and are hemmed at the edges.

When you wrap a parcel or a gift in paper, the wrapping is often very creased and not easy to reuse. A furoshiki can be part of the present, and so can be used over and over. (Very green!)

A furoshiki exhibition 

Preventing garbage with traditional wrapping

An inspiring art exhibition of furoshiki
PingMag - online design magazine based in Tokyo

'Thanks, I don't need a bag!" How many times a day do I have to repeat this sentence? When buying drinks at a convenience store, apples at a supermarket or a pack of gum in all sorts of occasions we are given plastic bags which we only use for very short moments.

Learn how to fold furoshiki 

Buy this book on Amazon

Furoshiki Wrapping

Amazon Price: (as of 01/05/2010)Buy Now
List Price:

This book is featured on Furoshiki [dot] com

How to fold diagrams 

of traditional Japanese wrapping cloth

Download the diagram — it's free!
Furoshiki [dot] com

furoshiki is a traditional japanese wrapping cloth, use it to wrap everything. Furoshiki can be used for gift wrapping, grocey shopping or even as clothing

Uses for furoshiki 

on infomapJAPAN

infomapJAPAN Furoshiki

Introduction of Furoshiki, its history, culture, etiquette and how to use

Furoshki style tote 

make one, or two!

This is my favourite bag for toting quilts around for show and tell.

I have a smaller one for taking to the supermarket. (good green!)

Here's how it's made.

I have coloured the three layers in different colours so you can see what's to happen. Of course, you will get a really pretty bag if you use three bandannas, or three different batik fabrics...

1. Start with a length of fabric 

3 times as long as it is wide.



Hem all the way around — unless you want to make a separate lining.

Fold in an S — three equal divisions.

2. Sew yellow to brown 

right sides together

3. Turn out, round, sew brown to blue 

On the opposite edge of the brown layer (right sides together, again)

4. Turn the bag out 

Pat it flat

5. Tie a knot in the handles 

Done!

Both utilitarian and beautiful 

furoshiki on Layers of Meaning blog

Some excellent design, historical and other information for you to read...
Layers of Meaning

Furoshiki is a Japanese art of using fabric squares to wrap packages.

Wrap cloth kits for you on Amazon 

Sorry, there are no results available from Amazon.

Other cloth wrap lenses on Squidoo 

Jan T 

furoshiki fan

Lensmaster JanTUB has been a member since April 15 2009, has rated 176 lenses, favorited 155, and has created 86 lenses from scratch. Jan T (Urquhart) Baillie donates their royalties to Squidoo Charity Fund. This member's top-ranked page is "Electric Quilt Tutorials". See all my lenses

Drop me a line 

about furoshiki, or anything else you want to say...

submit
  • Reply
    www.lygo.fr fair trade www.lygo.fr fair trade Sep 9, 2009 @ 5:38 am
    Très vite indispensable ! super écolo et de fabrication éthique et équitable. Que demander de plus aux furoshiki de Lygo sur http://www.lygo.fr A se procurer de toute urgence ! furoshiki by Lygo
    Fair trade production for this green idea on http://www.lygo.fr Furoshiki by Lygo
  • Reply
    JanTUB JanTUB Aug 31, 2009 @ 1:18 am | in reply to Mickie_G
    Fun aren't they?
  • Reply
    JanTUB JanTUB Aug 31, 2009 @ 1:17 am | in reply to Umeshu
    Thanks for popping by!
  • Reply
    Mickie_G Mickie_G Aug 20, 2009 @ 10:02 am
    Excellent sources on your lens! I have bookmarked it on my computer so I can refer to it often! I especially like the link to furoshiki.com!
  • Reply
    Umeshu Umeshu Jul 28, 2009 @ 7:41 pm
    Hello,
    Thanks for the is great leans on furoshiki - a very nice Japanese custom. I am writing on Japanese food and also added yours to my lens for people who want to learn more about Japanese traditional culture.
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by JanTUB

I have been quilting for more than a quarter of a century. (Sounds much longer than 25 years.) That's me in my studio in 2006.



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