NationalGeographicTravellerAustraliaandNewZealandWinter2018

(Sean Pound) #1
96 NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC TRAVELLER

Near Oaxaca City, in Teotitlán del Valle, Fidel Cruz Lazo
and his family are renowned for their beautiful, handmade
Zapotec wool rugs, known as tapetes. Their rugs differ from
most others in the area, as all of their wool is dyed using natural
means. Although the actual recipes have been lost to history,
self-taught Cruz Lazo has done his best to reverse-engineer the
way he believes his ancestors coloured their textiles using fruits,
minerals, clays, vegetables, flowers and insects. At Casa Cruz
the family conducts demonstrations on how to
make its fabric dyes. “We are not worried about
people stealing Fidel’s recipes, so we have no
secrets,” his wife, María Luisa Mendoza, says.
“Dyeing yarn this way is too much work to be
lucrative. We do it because we love it and to keep
the old traditions alive.”
Historically, the most famous pigment to come
out of Mexico is red, which is made from a small
parasitic insect known as the cochineal. Cruz Lazo’s son shows
me how to harvest the insects off cactus paddles, where they
ingest the plant’s flesh and convert it into carminic acid. Once
dried, their bodies are ground up and mixed with water and
ammonia or sodium carbonate to render a blood-red dye bath.
Some historians consider this red the greatest treasure, after
gold and silver, the Spanish plundered from the New World.
Next we pick pericón flowers (a tarragon substitute), which,
legend holds, were used in powdered form by the Aztec to relax
their sacrificial victims. The Cruz family now uses pericón to
make a brilliant yellow dye. We crush local indigo plants to
make blue, and walnut shells to yield a rich, chocolate brown.
Seeing the amount of work that goes into dyeing each spool of
hand-spun wool makes me appreciate how much we take colour
for granted. I look anew at the clothing everyone is wearing,
realising what it would take to create those tints naturally.

Since late morning I’ve been chasing 76-year-old traditional dyer
Habacuc Avendaño and his son as they braved the rocky coastline
of Isla San Agustín in Oaxaca, Mexico. For hours Habacuc scaled
down slippery boulders into the frothing surf to pluck a single
tixinda snail hidden among hundreds of urchins, limpets and
other marine mollusks. As soon as he pulled a snail from its hiding
place, the shell filled with a defensive exudate. Careful not to spill
the contents, Habacuc gently poured the cream-colored liquid
over a skein of cotton draped on his shoulder. This
was the dyeing technique his family had employed
for hundreds of years. After hours of trailing him
through the unrelenting Oaxacan sun, I caught
up with him as he stood in front of a split in the
rock. Instead of reaching in for the next precious
shell, Habacuc stepped aside and nodded to me.
It was my turn.

I AM ObSESSED with the colour purple, which I wear on an almost
daily basis. I have purple rooms in my home and a lavender-
painted car in the garage. My favourite musical artist, Prince, set
me on my purple path at an early age. For me the colour evokes
bacchanalian rhythms and cosmic sensuality but also antiquity
and royalty. Purple stained the sails of Cleopatra’s ship and the
togas of Roman emperors.
The traditional way of tinting textiles purple involved marine
snails. but was anyone on the planet still dyeing fabric like this?
If so, how did the process actually work? Heartsick over Prince’s
death in 2016, I decided it was time to connect my recent interest
in indigenous textiles with my nearly lifelong passion for purple.
In pursuit, I head south. The Mexican state of Oaxaca is a
bastion of ancient colour, a land where naturally dyed textiles
still dazzle with kaleidoscopic opulence. Here pre-Columbian
dyeing techniques remain in practice but are increasingly rare.

600600 mi mi
600600 km km

OAXACA

Gulf of
Mexico
Mexico
City

MEXICO

UNITED STATES

GUATEMALA

PA
CI
FIC

(^) OC
EAN
diego huerta; previous page: diego huerta; Ng
Maps
“GO AHEAD, HERMANO.
Milk tHE sN Ail.”

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