A bandana
or bandanna (from Sanskrit बन्धन or bandhana, "a bond") is
a type of large, usually colourful kerchief, originating from the Indian
subcontinent, often worn on the head or around the neck of a person. It is
considered to be a hat by some. Bandanas are frequently printed in a paisley
pattern and are most often used to hold hair back, either as a fashionable head
accessory, or for practical purposes. It is also used to tie around the neck to
prevent sunburn, and around the mouth and nose to protect from dust inhalation
or to hide the identity of its wearer.
Bandanas
originated in India as bright coloured handkerchiefs of silk and cotton with
spots in white on coloured grounds, chiefly red and blue Bandhani. The silk
styles were made of the finest quality yarns, and were popular. Bandana prints
for clothing were first produced in Glasgow from cotton yarns, and are now made
in many qualities. The term, at present, generally means a fabric in printed
styles, whether silk, silk and cotton, or all cotton.
The word
bandana stems from the Hindi words 'bāndhnū,' or "tie-dyeing," and
'bāndhnā,' "to tie." These stem from Sanskrit roots 'badhnāti,'
"he ties," and Sanskrit 'bandhana' (बन्धन), "a bond."[4] In the 18th and 19th centuries bandanas were
frequently known as bandannoes.
The Global History of the Bandana
How an Indian export became part of the fabric of
American life
By Laura
Hilgers
SMITHSONIAN
MAGAZINE |
NOVEMBER 2020
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/innovation/global-history-bandana-180976040/
Long before
American cowboys sported bandanas, the European snuff user of the 18th century
suffered from an embarrassing problem: Blowing his nose into a white or
solid-colored handkerchief left behind dark tobacco stains. He found a stylish
solution in India, where textile makers employed a millennium-old tie-dyeing
technique called bandhani to create colorful silk and cotton kerchiefs covered
in lively patterns. After the Dutch and English East India companies imported
these kerchiefs to England, snuff-takers embraced them to make their habit more
discreet, and the name was anglicized to “bandana.”
By the
early 19th century, Europe had started producing its own bandanas, most notably
in Mulhouse, France, where dye producers developed a version of Turkey red, the
color most commonly associated with bandanas today. The original dye was made
of sheep dung, madder root and olive oil, and applied to fabric through a
process so complicated it inspired “all sorts of industrial espionage,” says
Susan Brown, associate curator of textiles at the Cooper Hewitt Smithsonian
Design Museum. The familiar paisley pattern imitated Kashmir shawls.
In colonial
America, bandanas were sometimes printed with maps, as guides for travel. They
also made a splash during the Revolutionary War. One bandana from the period
featured a likeness of George Washington astride a horse, encircled by a series
of cannons and the words, “George Washington, Esq., Foundator and Protector of
America’s Liberty and Independency.” Historians suspect that Martha Washington
commissioned this cotton bandana, likely made in 1775 or 1776 by Philadelphia
textile manufacturer John Hewson.
Bandanas
have appeared frequently in American politics ever since. Theodore Roosevelt’s
1912 bandana included the words and music for his boisterous campaign song, “We
Want Teddy.” The bandana for Adlai Stevenson’s 1956 presidential campaign
featured a smiling photo of the candidate and exhorted voters to go “All the
Way with Adlai.”
Still
beloved by cowboys and bandits—including a bank robber in Miami Lakes, Florida,
this January—bandanas today are used as a handkerchief, neck covering, head
scarf or, in Covid-19 times, face mask. “They were largely meant for hard use,”
says Madelyn Shaw, a curator at the Smithsonian National Museum of American
History’s division of cultural and community life. Despite their all-American
status, the best-selling bandanas during the pandemic aren’t red, white or
blue. They’re black.
The History of the Bandana
EDUCATION HISTORY
UPDATED:
MAY 9, 2018 |
PUBLISHED:
MAY 4, 2017
BY MADS
JAKOBSEN
https://www.heddels.com/2017/05/the-history-of-the-bandana/
You see
them in back pockets, around foreheads, on necks and even wiping noses. The
bandana is one of the most versatile pieces of clothing to have entered the
wardrobe of modern western civilization. There are an infinite number of ways
to use that light square of roughly 20 by 20 inch cloth, but where did the
bandana as we know it today originate?
From
ancient South Asian roots to an early American rebrand, we’re going deep on the
classic bandana.
Reminiscent
in shape, size and function of the kerchief, which has been in use since
ancient Roman and Greek times, the bandana is defined as a printed,
square-shaped piece of plain-woven cotton, called cambric (although it could be
made of silk). This separates the bandana from its forerunner, which was
traditionally made from linen and had less emphasis on prints and colors as
opposed to name embroidery and the like.
The bandana
has served an important function for generations, worn by the likes of sailors,
seafarers, farmers, cowboys, bikers and miners, and its use even extends to the
LGBT community, gang members and general rebel culture. And the two-tone
paisley-printed cotton cambric cloth has come a long way from the traditional
resist dye techniques of Turkey and India, at times representing political
campaigns and patriotism, at others, aiding in the promotion of popular culture
and other twentieth century advertising.
The word
itself is suspected to come from the sanskrit word ‘badhnati’ which means binds
or to tie. Through colonization and trade, the name found its way into the
English dictionary around the mid-eighteenth century. Badhnati was later
anglicized into ‘bandannoe’ via Portuguese and eventually it came to be the
bandana we know today.
From Persia
to Paisley
You might
be surprised that the famous paisley pattern that most of us associate with
printed bandanas doesn’t actually come from Paisley, Scotland, but rather the
region of Kashmir (once part of the Persian empire).
Paisley is
traditionally known as a distinctive, intricate pattern of curved
feather-shaped figures, originally based on an Indian pinecone design. Having
read a vast amount of speculations in the origins of the paisley, or ‘boteh’ as
they call it in Persian, this might not be an entirely accurate description of
the pattern.
Boteh has
several meanings in Persian: bush, shrub, a thicket, bramble, herb. Some would
even take it to mean a palm leaf, cluster of leaves (perhaps as a repeated
pattern) and flower bud. For those looking for a jumping point, the boteh
design dates back to over two thousand years ago and, given, Kashmir’s
location, it also reached India, where they referred to it as ‘buta’.
Woven
cashmere with buta prints were imported to Europe via the Dutch East India
company in the eighteenth century, and quickly grew popular. Used as women’s
shawls, these printed pieces symbolized great status, but were also quite
expensive and eventually demand outgrew supply. Prices increased and thus many
European (particularly English and Scottish) companies began to produce their
own shawls in these styles.
In Western
culture, this lopsided teardrop had many different associations depending on
the country. In France, they called it ‘tadpoles’; in Wales they were ‘Welsh
pears’; and in America, which was probably the most accurate, they referred to
them as ‘Persian pickles’. But it was still the name ‘paisley’ that ended up
sticking with the masses as the design spread across the globe.
The
invention of the Jacquard loom would shutter many of the Scottish mills weaving
Paisley style fabrics, but their dyeing dexterity and chemistry know-how would
keep the Scots in the textile game.
Popularization
of the Bandana
A seminal
happening in the popularization of the bandana came during the American
Revolution. Martha Washington, the wife of Continental Army general George
Washington, had a souvenir bandana made featuring the likeness of the
Commander-in-Chief.
The idea
came to her when she met a printmaker by the name of John Hewson. Hewson was a
talented artist and, more importantly, not afraid to defy the British ban on
textile printing at the time. Hewson designed a bandana of her husband on
horseback, decorated with cannons, flags and a ring of promotional text,
highlighting Washington’s dedication to liberty and American independence.
Considered
the first-ever bandana—at least as we know them today—it would go on to inspire
political campaigns for centuries. In the 1950s, this type of political
promotion was becoming increasingly popular, as politicians started to print
their campaign slogans on similar bandanas for their supporters, peaking with
Dwight Eisenhower’s 1952 Win with Ike for President.
The-History-of-the-Bandana-president-ike
Later, the
bandana would come to affect advertising and marketing in the fast-changing pop
culture landscape that came on the heels of the Industrial Revolution.
As variety,
experimentation, and imagination became intrinsic elements in popular
entertainment it bled over into new styles of advertising. Many made bandanas
to show their affinity for sports teams, musicians or movie stars. Anything
from the Yankees to Elvis to promotion of Disney characters, could be found on
bandanas, and Kellogg’s cleverly used bandanas as collector’s pieces in order
to sell more boxes of cereal. A new marketing strategy was born, and you could
tie it around your head.
Bandanas in
Workwear
After
becoming an advertising medium, the bandana became an even more important
symbol in the fight for worker’s rights. The West Virginia Coal Miners March of
1921 was one of the largest armed uprisings in labor history and, at the march,
over ten thousand United Mine Workers wore red bandanas to demand unions, an
event many equate to the popularization of the derogatory term “redneck.”
It was a
battle between scarcely armed miners and armed lawmen of Logan County, but
President Coolidge called in federal troops to support the strikebreakers. With
more than a hundred casualties—mainly from the ranks of the coal miners—and
almost a thousand arrests, management came out on top, but the labor movement
would spark a change that eventually led to better conditions for union workers
all over the country.
The bandana
really came into its own during World War II, as women on the home front
entered American factories and used them to tie their long hair back. Due to
this, and partly due to John Wayne Westerns, the bandana became an iconic
accessory that’s lasted to this day (even weathering the storm of some
unfortunate applications, at times getting used as outlaw face protection and
as a key piece in the vagrant’s bindle).
In the 70s,
the bandana—and its different colors—was used in an entirely different fashion.
Implemented by the gay community, the handkerchief code became an easy way to
identify not only other gay men but also tell sexual preferences and/or
fetishes from potential partners. Different colors and pockets were a quick way
to communicate in plain sight with a community that was still largely forced
underground.
However,
this movement is far different from the affiliation color code implemented by
prominent gangs of the 80s, such as the Bloods and Crips, who would show their
affiliation by wearing a red or blue bandana, respectively.
Produced
for centuries in the east, the Turkey red-dyeing process would later became
synonymous with printed cottons in Scotland, and thus the original, mainstream
bandana. Brought to Scotland in 1785 by a French entrepreneur, it was then
adopted by manufacturers in the Vale of Leven, Dunbartonshire.
It was a
both complex and laborious process, involving madder root and alizarin to fix
the dye to the cloth, as well as sheep’s dung, bullock’s blood and urine. This
admittedly odd combination produced a highly valued color, one that wouldn’t
fade with sunlight and washing–aka colorfast. The phenomenon of color fastness
was a new and valued concept, but the use of the term wasn’t actually
introduced until sometime around 1916.
Due to
competition from Europe—production began in Manchester, the Germans developed
synthetic dyes and Asian manufacturing scaled their volume — the three biggest
companies, William Stirling and Sons, John Orr Ewing and Co. and Archibald Orr
Ewing, amalgamated and formed United Turkey Red Co. in 1898. It was a large and
successful operation that would go on to exist for almost two hundred years,
closing their last factory in 1961.
According
to Kiro Hirata—designer of Japanese brand Kapital and creator and curator of
the Elephant Brand Bandana Museum, in Kojima, Okayama—the first Turkey red
bandana dates back to around the 1850s. He’s opened this museum to share his
interest in bandanas and the intriguing history attached to it. With over 250
bandanas on display, he’s managed to document the storied journey of an iconic,
enduring design.
Another
famous bandana brand featured at the museum, is the NYC-based Davis and
Catterall, which existed from the 1920s to the 1970s. Also known as The
Elephant Brand by collectors, because they implemented little elephants on
their bandanas, Elephant Brand is widely recognized as the original Americana
bandana. Because of this, many of these are sought-after collectors pieces,
with price tags depending on age and design, with advertising variations being
the most collectible.
Famous for
their little elephant logo, which was typically printed next to an inscription
saying: “fast color, 100% cotton,” the pictured elephant has gone through a few
variations.
During the
50s, the trunk of the elephant, which had originally been facing down (dubbed
as “trunk down”), was flipped, so it was turning up (“trunk up”), in order for
Elephant to distinguish themselves from the competition. In 1986 a “classic”
red/black/white (amongst other colors) bandana was entered into the Cooper
Hewitt [Design] Museum, New York, donated by Penelope McClain, also indicating
the historical significance of the bandana.
And the
bandana market has continued to expand to this day, even if it hasn’t
necessarily flourished. The little square cloth maintains its versatility as a
close-at-hand accessory—both as a headband, necktie or even as a cloth to wipe
off your phone screen. But who knew that this simple design would’ve had such a
massive impact on so many different cultures.
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