Applying Axial Symmetries to Historical Silk Fabrics: SILKNOW’s Virtual Loom

Symmetry is part of textile art in patterns and motifs that decorate fabrics, which are made by the interlacement of warp and wefts. Moreover, the 3D representation of fabrics have already been studied by some authors; however, they have not specifically dealt with preserving historical weaving tech...

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Main Authors: Mar Gaitán, Cristina Portalés, Javier Sevilla, Ester Alba
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-05-01
Series:Symmetry
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2073-8994/12/5/742
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spelling doaj-6f6c66d4cd794364b0e60924dcaf165e2020-11-25T03:13:20ZengMDPI AGSymmetry2073-89942020-05-011274274210.3390/sym12050742Applying Axial Symmetries to Historical Silk Fabrics: SILKNOW’s Virtual LoomMar Gaitán0Cristina Portalés1Javier Sevilla2Ester Alba3Department of Art History, Universitat de València, 46010 València, SpainInstitute of Robotics and Information and Communication Technologies (IRTIC), Universitat de València, 46980 València, SpainInstitute of Robotics and Information and Communication Technologies (IRTIC), Universitat de València, 46980 València, SpainDepartment of Art History, Universitat de València, 46010 València, SpainSymmetry is part of textile art in patterns and motifs that decorate fabrics, which are made by the interlacement of warp and wefts. Moreover, the 3D representation of fabrics have already been studied by some authors; however, they have not specifically dealt with preserving historical weaving techniques. In this paper, we present the SILKNOW’s Virtual Loom, a tool intended to document, preserve and reproduce silk historical weaving techniques from the 15th to the 19th centuries. We focus on the symmetry function and its contribution to art history, textile conservation, and modern design. We analyzed 2028 records from Garin 1820 datasets—a historical industry that still weaves with these techniques—and we reconstructed some historical designs that presented different types of defects. For those images (including fabrics and drawings) that had a symmetrical axis, we applied the symmetry functionality allowing to reconstruct missing parts. Thanks to these results, we were able to verify the usefulness of the Virtual Loom for conservation, analysis and new interpretative advantages, thanks to symmetry analysis applied to historical fabrics.https://www.mdpi.com/2073-8994/12/5/742virtual loomsilk fabricssymmetry analysis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mar Gaitán
Cristina Portalés
Javier Sevilla
Ester Alba
spellingShingle Mar Gaitán
Cristina Portalés
Javier Sevilla
Ester Alba
Applying Axial Symmetries to Historical Silk Fabrics: SILKNOW’s Virtual Loom
Symmetry
virtual loom
silk fabrics
symmetry analysis
author_facet Mar Gaitán
Cristina Portalés
Javier Sevilla
Ester Alba
author_sort Mar Gaitán
title Applying Axial Symmetries to Historical Silk Fabrics: SILKNOW’s Virtual Loom
title_short Applying Axial Symmetries to Historical Silk Fabrics: SILKNOW’s Virtual Loom
title_full Applying Axial Symmetries to Historical Silk Fabrics: SILKNOW’s Virtual Loom
title_fullStr Applying Axial Symmetries to Historical Silk Fabrics: SILKNOW’s Virtual Loom
title_full_unstemmed Applying Axial Symmetries to Historical Silk Fabrics: SILKNOW’s Virtual Loom
title_sort applying axial symmetries to historical silk fabrics: silknow’s virtual loom
publisher MDPI AG
series Symmetry
issn 2073-8994
publishDate 2020-05-01
description Symmetry is part of textile art in patterns and motifs that decorate fabrics, which are made by the interlacement of warp and wefts. Moreover, the 3D representation of fabrics have already been studied by some authors; however, they have not specifically dealt with preserving historical weaving techniques. In this paper, we present the SILKNOW’s Virtual Loom, a tool intended to document, preserve and reproduce silk historical weaving techniques from the 15th to the 19th centuries. We focus on the symmetry function and its contribution to art history, textile conservation, and modern design. We analyzed 2028 records from Garin 1820 datasets—a historical industry that still weaves with these techniques—and we reconstructed some historical designs that presented different types of defects. For those images (including fabrics and drawings) that had a symmetrical axis, we applied the symmetry functionality allowing to reconstruct missing parts. Thanks to these results, we were able to verify the usefulness of the Virtual Loom for conservation, analysis and new interpretative advantages, thanks to symmetry analysis applied to historical fabrics.
topic virtual loom
silk fabrics
symmetry analysis
url https://www.mdpi.com/2073-8994/12/5/742
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