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*''Japanese'': 雛形 ''(hiinagata)''
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[[File:Moronobu-hinagata.jpg|right|thumb|320px|An opening from ''Tôsei hiinagata'', a [[1667]] pattern book illustrated by [[Hishikawa Moronobu]]]]
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*''Japanese'': 雛形 ''(hinagata)'', 雛形本 ''(hinagata bon)''
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''Hiinagata'' were pattern books produced and sold in the [[Edo period]] which depicted fabric designs which readers could then order from textile merchants, either in the form of bolts of cloth, or as ready-to-wear [[clothing|garments]].
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''Hinagata'', or ''Hinagata-bon'', were pattern books produced and sold in the [[Edo period]] which depicted fabric designs which readers could then order from textile merchants, either in the form of bolts of cloth, or as ready-to-wear [[clothing|garments]].
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The first such book, ''On Hiinagata'', was published in [[1666]] and contained patterns for two hundred ''kosode kimono''. It was very quickly followed by the publication of numerous similar volumes. These pattern books advertised new dyeing, printing, and other textile decoration techniques, as well as new patterns, styles, and fashions, which one could then buy. They quickly came to be used not only by consumers, but by producers, to know what their competitors were selling, and what was popular or fashionable, guiding the producers' own designs.
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The first such book, ''On Hinagata'', was published in [[1666]] and contained patterns for two hundred ''kosode kimono''. It was very quickly followed by the publication of numerous similar volumes. These pattern books advertised new dyeing, printing, and other textile decoration techniques, as well as new patterns, styles, and fashions, which one could then buy. They quickly came to be used not only by consumers, but by producers, to know what their competitors were selling, and what was popular or fashionable, guiding the producers' own designs.
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Scholar [[Eiko Ikegami]] identifies these ''hiinagata-bon'' ("''hiinagata'' books") as "mark[ing] the birth of popular interest in fashion and the rise of a lucrative fashion industry."<ref>Ikegami, 271.</ref>
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Scholar [[Eiko Ikegami]] identifies these ''hinagata-bon'' ("''hinagata'' books") as "mark[ing] the birth of popular interest in fashion and the rise of a lucrative fashion industry."<ref>Ikegami, 271.</ref>
    
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