User:Emmayer/Adire (textile art)/Bibliography

You will be compiling your bibliography and creating an outline of the changes you will make in this sandbox.

Outline of proposed changes (possible in-text citations)

 * "Initially produced in south-western Nigeria, adire textiles traveled to northern Africa through Yoruba traders and trader families. Some families who chose to migrate up north began creating adire cloths to market to other women. " (APPLIED) (Found PARAGRAPH 1 of text)
 * Edit to definition in article of Adire: "Adire (Yoruba) textile is a type of dyed cloth made in south west Nigeria by Yoruba women, using a variety of resist-dyeing techniques. It is a material designed with wax-resist methods that produce patterned designs in dazzling arrays of tints and hues." ↓

"Adire (Yoruba) textile is a type of dyed cloth crafted from handmade paste and various types of resist-dyeing techniques, made in south west Nigeria traditionally by Yoruba women. The material is designed with wax-resist methods that produce patterned designs." (editing next part using another source) (NOT APPLIED) (Found PARAGRAPH 1)

Possible additional edit to definition of adire and the resist dying technique.

"Adire was produced by a method known as resist dyeing in which portions of the fabric were covered with paste or raffia thread made from palm fiber in order to resist the penetration of of the dye solution....It appears that resist dyeing was initially used on threads but by the nineteenth century it was applied to cloths. Some adire were created on locally woven cloth, but it was primarily produced with imported European manufactured cloth, a development which resulted in part from economic transformations that solidified during the first few decades of colonial rule."


 * "Adire has a history of being woven locally, but also produced from European manufactured cloth from earlier colonization." (NOT APPLIED) (Found Page 79 of journal, but Page 3/23 of link to journal provided in references)