Edo Fragments V2 is a limited-run archival patch cloth created for makers, repairers, garment builders, and anyone who wants to add history into the surface of what they make.
This 25” × 25” sheet features a curated collage of public-domain Japanese ukiyo-e woodblock print fragments, reassembled into one large-format fabric panel and printed onto heavyweight organic 300gsm cotton canvas. The artwork draws from the visual world of Edo-period print culture: kabuki actors, women in kimono, handwritten calligraphy, fan-shaped compositions, illustrated story scenes, nature details, symbolic animals, patterned garments, and aged paper textures.
The sheet is designed to be cut, frayed, layered, patched, repaired, and reworked.
Each piece becomes part of your own garment’s story — whether stitched into denim, jackets, bags, workwear, aprons, trousers, or experimental garments.
Designed for Use Across Any Project
Edo Fragments V2 is intentionally open-ended. Use it to:
- Add character to jeans
- Jackets, trousers, aprons, and workwear
- Reinforce worn areas through visible mending
- Create custom patches for bags, totes, and accessories
- Layer archival imagery into new garments
- Cut out small story fragments, labels, panels, or large statement patches
The 300gsm organic cotton canvas has enough structure to hold up as a patch, but still softens and frays beautifully with wear. You can leave the edges raw for a broken-in relic effect, or stitch them down cleanly for a stronger, more controlled finish.
Material & Print Details
Fabric: 100% organic cotton canvas
Weight: 300gsm
Sheet size: 25” × 25” / 63.5 × 63.5 cm
Finish: Hand-cut sheet edge
Surface: Soft, structured, and ideal for patchwork
Use: Cut-out patches, visible mending, garment repair, bags, denim, jackets, and workwear
Each sheet contains multiple usable fragments in different sizes, shapes, and compositions, giving you the freedom to decide how each piece is cut and placed.
The Artwork
The imagery in Edo Fragments V2 comes from public-domain Japanese ukiyo-e woodblock prints and printed ephemera associated with Edo-period visual culture. Ukiyo-e, often translated as “pictures of the floating world,” became one of Japan’s most recognisable print traditions, depicting kabuki actors, beautiful women, theatre scenes, travel, nature, fashion, stories, and everyday material life.
Rather than reproducing one single artwork, this sheet treats the archive as raw material. Each fragment has been selected, cropped, aged, and arranged into a new textile object — not as a museum reproduction, but as a usable surface for contemporary making.
This is not just decoration. It is a way to stitch old visual language into new work.
Visual Credit & Context Notes
This sheet contains a curated arrangement of public-domain ukiyo-e and Japanese print fragments. The exact source titles vary across the sheet, but the visual categories include:
Kabuki actor portrait fragments
Several sections show expressive male theatre portraits, likely from the yakusha-e tradition: actor prints made to celebrate kabuki performers, stage roles, and dramatic facial expressions.
Bijin-ga / women in kimono fragments
Multiple fragments show women in layered kimono, seated or posed within domestic/story scenes. These sit within the broader bijin-ga tradition: images of women, fashion, gesture, fabric, and interior life.
Calligraphy and manuscript fragments
The upper calligraphic panel and smaller handwritten areas reference the written surface of Japanese printed culture: poems, story text, notes, seals, and inscriptions that often appeared alongside prints.
Fan-shaped composition fragment
The lower central fan-shaped artwork references the long relationship between ukiyo-e and decorative objects, including fan prints, seasonal compositions, nature motifs, and poetic inscriptions.
Animal and symbolic fragments
The turtle/tortoise image and other nature details add symbolic, folkloric, and decorative elements to the sheet, giving smaller usable fragments that work especially well as patch details.
Patterned garment and textile details
Many figures are surrounded by richly patterned robes, grids, florals, and printed textile surfaces. These areas are especially useful for cutting small abstract patches that still carry the feeling of the original archive.
Newspaper / illustrated story fragment
The small rectangular printed scene with text has the feeling of Edo or later Japanese illustrated reporting/story print culture, bringing a document-like, artefact quality to the sheet.
Public-domain acknowledgement
The works are used as public-domain archival material and reinterpreted as a contemporary patch cloth for garment making. The sheet is produced in homage to the artists, printers, carvers, publishers, and craftspeople who shaped Japanese woodblock print culture. Databases such as ukiyo-e.org aggregate large collections of Japanese woodblock prints across museums and archives, including major artists such as Utagawa Kunisada, Utagawa Hiroshige, Utagawa Kuniyoshi, Toyokuni, and Hokusai.
Limited Physical Stock
Edo Fragments V2 is a limited physical product. Once the first run sells out, it will not be immediately restocked.
Each sheet is printed, handled, and packed as a material object — not a digital download, not a print-on-demand file, and not a mass-produced trim.
Pair It With the Workwear Series
Edo Fragments V2 has been designed to sit naturally alongside the Roughcut Workwear Series, especially on denim, canvas, duck cloth, hickory, aprons, jackets, carpenter trousers, dungarees, and coveralls.
But it is not limited to Roughcut patterns.
Cut it up. Stitch it down. Repair something. Ruin it beautifully. Make the garment feel like it already has a past.