Weaving Connections

Weaving Connections

Curated by the National Taiwan Craft Research and Development Institute (NTCRI), cross-border craft initiative FIBER LINKS connects designers and artisans across Southeast Asia to create a series of fibre craft products ranging from fashion to home accessories

Rattan mats and crafts by Shan Jie Hao bamboo studio and the Bidayuh community from Serikin, Malaysia, 2021. Image copyright Kelvin Chan Photography

In recent years, local traditional crafts have gained greater attention and recognition from Asia’s design community — a revived appreciation that has led designers from all over the region to reignite ties with local artisans. Rooted in Asia’s diverse traditions, fibre crafts, which involve knitting, sewing or weaving materials such as hemp, cotton, yarn and leather, have not only played a significant role in people’s daily lives for centuries, but also embody the symbolic idea of bonding. This is what inspired the launch of FIBER LINKS, a craft co-creation project curated by the National Taiwan Craft Research and Development Institute (NTCRI) in partnership with the ASEAN Handicraft Promotion & Development Association (AHPADA).

The online initiative aims to ‘connect and engage artisans and designers during the COVID-19 pandemic, in the belief that fibre crafts can bring relief and comfort to people during these trying times,’ said FIBER LINKS co-curators Meng-Chii Huang — principal of FIBER LINKS — and AHPADA president Eric Ong in a statement. Connecting 24 designers and craft communities from across eight Southeast Asian nations, the cross-border initiative resulted in a range of collaborations that celebrate and bring a new meaning to Asian fibre crafts.

Taiwanese textile designer Eileen Chung, who runs fashion brand mee.textile, partnered with Thai brand Hemp Saithong to create a pair of hats, while in another collaboration, Taiwan’s Abus Bunun Ramie Traditional Clothing Studio and Indonesian designer Myra Widiono co-created a ramie shawl featuring a woven diamond motif, a symbol of togetherness in both designers’ cultures. Combining fibre crafts with the art of natural dyeing, Novieta Tourisia, who runs Bali craft studio Cinta Bumi Artisans and Taiwan’s Xinpu Persimmon Dye House created a persimmon-dyed tote bag and dress.

The project also includes a range of home accessories, including lampshades and handbags by Sarawak-based atelier Tanoti Crafts and Taiwan’s Essence Design&Craft. Tanoti Crafts also worked with members of Taiwan’s indigenous Kakawasan tribe to create weavings on two ginger shell chandeliers. Taiwanese designer Yiyu Chen took the concepts of ‘island’ and ‘ocean' as starting points for creating a mobile installation that was produced in collaboration with farmers, pina weavers and embroiderers. May Sun Studio and Anyaman Begerang created a mobile and a lamp based on the the traditional ranyek bag. Another multidisciplinary collaboration brings together the works of Philippine fashion designer Ditta Sandico, Thai designers Korakot Aromdee and studio PATAPiAN and Taiwan’s bamboo design studio 2nd Corner Studio and artist Shan Jie Hao in a collection of home accessories made of banana fibre, bamboo, triangular rush and rattan.

Altogether, FIBER LINKS documents collaborations undertaken remotely during the pandemic while introducing new cross-disciplinary approaches to fibre crafts — a meaningful exchange of techniques that unites Taiwanese designers and craftspeople across cultures and borders.

All of the products created for FIBER LINKS can be seen on the project’s official Facebook page, and an online exhibition is set to launch from December 5, 2021.

Crafting Innerglow from ginger shell. Image copyright Kakawasan

Weaving ramie. Image copyright Yuanstudio

Persimmon dyeing. Image copyright Yuanstudio

Weaving the Mind Connections cushion. Image copyright Yuanstudio

mee.textile and Hemp Saithong’s Pathway hat. Image copyright Hemp Saithong

mee.textile and Hemp Saithong’s Shake Shake hat. Image copyright Hemp Saithong

The Bunun Ramie Association and Myra Widiono’s Rhythm on Ramie, 2021. Image copyright Hsuyuan Studio

Sparks of Life tote bag by Cinta Bumi Artisans and Xinpu Persimmon Dye House. Image copyright Hsuyuan Studio

Sparks of Life kaftan dress Cinta Bumi Artisans and Xinpu Persimmon Dye House. Image copyright Hsuyuan Studio

Tanoti Crafts and Essence Design&Craft’s Croll-In Handle bag. Image copyright Kelvin Chan Photography

Tanoti Crafts and Essence Design&Craft’s AJAR lamp shade. Image copyright Kelvin Chan Photography

Innerglow by Tanoti Crafts and members of the Kakawasan tribe. Image copyright Hsuyuan Studio

Innerglow by Tanoti Crafts and members of the Kakawasan tribe. Image copyright Hsuyuan Studio

Ditta Sandico’s LALABAN, Mind Connections table mat. Image copyright Hsuyuan Studio

Ditta Sandico’s LALABAN, Mind Connections cushion. Image copyright Hsuyuan Studio

Kora Tainan by Korakot Aromdee and the Bamboo Society in Tainan. Image copyright Hsuyuan Studio

Kora Tainan by Korakot Aromdee and the Bamboo Society in Tainan. Image copyright Hsuyuan Studio

Forest Bathing table lamp by PATAPiAN and Taiwan Yuan Li Handiwork Association. Image copyright Hsuyuan Studio

Iban basketry by 2nd Corner Studio and Catherine Senia Jugi. Image copyright Kelvin Chan Photography

Table lamp by 2nd Corner Studio and Catherine Senia Jugi. Image copyright Kelvin Chan Photography

Rattan mats and crafts by Shan Jie Hao bamboo studio and the Bidayuh community from Serikin, Malaysia, 2021. Image copyright Kelvin Chan Photography

Light by May Sun Studio and Anyaman Begerang. Image copyright Kelvin Chan Photography

Mobile by May Sun Studio and Anyaman Begerang. Image copyright Kelvin Chan Photography

Floating with the Waves piña by Yiyu Chen and farmers, pina weavers and embroiderers. Image copyright Anna India Legaspi