When Misao Jo was 57 years old, she built a loom, and started weaving as a hobby. One day, she wove an “Obi” (a belt for Japanese Kimono), and found a warp thread was missing. But she thought it was making a good effect, and she was very pleased to find that a nice pattern had been formed by an accident. She showed the “Obi” to a person who was running a weaving factory in her neighborhood because she wanted to know how other people would value her weaving. The man told her that her “Obi” was “flawed” and it would be worthless as a commercial product because one warp thread was missing. Misao realized that a commercial factory is only eager to produce a “flawless”cloth, but she would be able to achieve a hand woven quality through intentionally making a “flawed” cloth.
Then she began to weave an “Obi” with many “flaws”. It was easy. She just skipped some blades of the reed when warping her loom. In doing so, she found that the absence of warp threads in irregular intervals and varied thickness could make more interesting effects. She finally finished an “Obi”, and it was highly praised by an owner of an “Obi” shop in “Shinsaibashi Street” (an expensive shopping street in Osaka, Japan).
Misao thought the aesthetic quality that made the “Obi” valuable must have derived from something hidden inside herself. And it must have been possible because she broke away from the conventional ways of thinking. She thought that weaving could be a way of self-expression if she could stay faithful to her true self when she weaves, without imitating “flawless” cloth produced by commercial factories.
She built a new loom with her third son, Kenzo, to put her idea into practice. She wove many items and gave them to her friends who were very grateful for it, and her friends soon became very eager to learn how to weave. Misao named her weaving method “SAORI” and started her career as a weaving teacher.
“SAORI”- a process to uncover hidden power of creativity
She
started teaching with 5 students. In her first lesson, she showed
them how to warp the loom, and assisted them in each step of
preparation. Then she told them to weave as they liked and advised
that they should try not to weave a cloth that looked machine-made.
To her surprise, soon the students started to weave beautiful works.
The talents hidden inside them were uncovered through
weaving.
Through this experience she was convinced that anyone
had a power of creativity, and if given the chance, anyone could
bring out their hidden ability and demonstrate it in their works. The
conventional way of teaching practiced in traditional lessons such as
“Ikebana” (flower arrangement) or doll making had forced the
students to follow the teacher’s instructions or copy a sample.
This was what had prevented the people from expressing individuality
and discovering their abilities hidden inside.
So she decided
to follow the following process. She would just teach her students
the basic techniques of using a loom, and helped them remove their
stereotypical preconceptions of weaving. But once the students
mastered the basic technique, she would just let them weave what they
liked. She would give them some suggestions and see how they would
react, but would never make further intervention. This gave the
weavers an opportunity to discover their true selves, and eventually
gave a pleasure to both weavers and herself..
