Alan Campbell Fabric: Saya Gata - Custom Black on White Belgian Linen / Cotton
Pickup available at 3143 Route 9
Usually ready in 24 hours
Saya Gata is one of the oldest continuous geometric patterns in Japanese textile history - a diagonal interlocking grid derived from the manji, the Buddhist symbol of eternity and good fortune that predates its 20th-century misappropriation by roughly two thousand years. The pattern appears on Noh theater costumes, Edo-period silk, and the robes of people who understood that geometry was a form of prayer.
The name translates approximately as "the pattern of the saya" - saya being a particular weave of silk so fine it was used for ceremonial underlayers. The irony is that saya-gata, in its printed form, is anything but underlayer. It is the loudest quiet pattern that exists: black and white, no color, no negotiation, and completely impossible to ignore.
Eight yards. Handprinted. The eternity symbol, rendered in linen, available for headboards.
| SKU: | AC207-30W | |
| Color: | Custom Black on White (Lot J55419 A) | |
| Width: | 48" | |
| Repeat: | 12"V | |
| Content: | 55% Linen 45% Cotton | |
| Origin: | Handprinted in the USA on ground woven in Belgium |
Please note that colors may not represent accurately in photo. Additional photo(s) provided to show scale, not colorway. Last photo shows full width of fabric. Please contact us before purchase with any questions. ALL SALES ARE FINAL, and we do not send cuttings for approval.









