Cape thumbnail 1
Cape thumbnail 2
Not currently on display at the V&A

Cape

19th century (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This style of cape was adapted from those worn by Portuguese missionaries in 16th-century Japan. It is called a ‘bôzukappa’, from the Japanese word for priest (bôzu) and the transliteration of the Portuguese for cape (kappa). Their use was initially restricted to members of the military (samurai) class, but by the 18th century other sections of society were wearing them for travel along the expanding network of roads that linked Japan’s towns and cities. The cape is reversible and is patterned on one side using the kasuri technique, whereby yarns are selectively dyed prior to weaving, and on the other with fabric striped in blue, black and orange. The design on the patterned side is the face of Okame, the goddess of mirth, which was no doubt chosen to cheer the traveller on his journey.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Cotton woven with selectively pre-dyed yarns (kasuri)
Brief description
Cape, cotton woven with selectively resist-dyed yarns, Japan, 19th century
Physical description
Circular cape made from 16 gored panels of cotton with a stand up collar. The plain weave cotton has a design of the face of Okame, goddess of mirth in the picture kasuri technique. The faces are white against a dark blue ground. The cape is lined throughout with plain weave cotton with blue, black and orange stripes. The collar and top edge of the garment are trimmed with a narrow blue cotton edging which is of plain weave structure having paired warps and tripled wefts. The cape is worn wraparound style, the left side overlapping the right. The fastenings at the top consist of a pair of dark brown buttons, each sewn onto the end of a short length of blue cotton braid and each one closing through a loop of the same braid. The fastening at waist level consists of two long blue cotton braid loops, one each side of the cape and each sewn underneath a circular patch of card covered in cotton.
Dimensions
  • Length: 90.5cm
  • Around hem circumference: 252cm
Styles
Object history
Purchased. Registered File number 1988/168.
Subject depicted
Summary
This style of cape was adapted from those worn by Portuguese missionaries in 16th-century Japan. It is called a ‘bôzukappa’, from the Japanese word for priest (bôzu) and the transliteration of the Portuguese for cape (kappa). Their use was initially restricted to members of the military (samurai) class, but by the 18th century other sections of society were wearing them for travel along the expanding network of roads that linked Japan’s towns and cities. The cape is reversible and is patterned on one side using the kasuri technique, whereby yarns are selectively dyed prior to weaving, and on the other with fabric striped in blue, black and orange. The design on the patterned side is the face of Okame, the goddess of mirth, which was no doubt chosen to cheer the traveller on his journey.
Bibliographic reference
Jackson, Anna, Japanese Country Textiles, London: V&A Publications, 1997, p.82, fig 53
Collection
Accession number
FE.1-1988

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Record createdFebruary 12, 2000
Record URL
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