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The Colors of Tarogil Village, Pakistan

A Color Workshop for Textile Students
Beaconhouse National University - Lahore, Pakistan

Some history first: The earliest known example of cotton is the fragment found at Mehrgarh, Pakistan, one of the most important Neolithic (Stone Age/7000 B.C. – 3200 B.C. ) sites.
(Source: Journal of Archaeological Science, Volume 29, Issue 12, December 2002, Pages 1393-1401)

Today, cotton textile production and apparel manufacturing are Pakistan's largest industries, accounting for about 70% of total export.

Consequently, it is quite significant that Beaconhouse National University has nurtured a Textiles Department. During my 4th week in Pakistan, I conducted a color workshop for these students.

The workshop included a field trip to the village - a small cluster of homes in the midst of the mustard fields that surrounds the Tarogil campus. The homes are primarily constructed of mud, mud-brick, and thatch. Unpaved streets and paths are filled with people dressed in traditional garb, donkey carts and buffalo carts (whose prototypes date back to the third millennium B.C.). No cars! A sense of timelessness . . . a step back to a time that most of us only see in movies. The visual landscape of Targogil village reminds us of that era in Pakistan that is the source of the earliest cotton fragment.

Tarogil Village Scene

The assignment required that the textile students note the colors in the village. In other words, get up close to whatever they encountered – whether it were the colors of the mustard fields surrounding the village or the materials and surfaces of objects and structures, such as the bricks and iron gates.

Student photographin the colors of the rocks
Boy and goat
Student photographing the colors of the rocks


Boy and goat


Children at the metal door of a home Detail of a painted door
Children at the gate to a home


Detail of a painted door


Mustard field surrounding the village
Students examining the colors of the earth and objects
Mustard field surrounding the village


Students examining the colors of the earth and other objects



One of the main streets
Mud and straw building material
One of the main streets


Mud and straw building material


Boys playing in the field


	Vegetation
-	-
Groceries in a cart


	Brick wall, blue door, and villagers



-	-
Water buffalo and woman
	A herd stampedes down the main street!
Vegetation
Tarogil boys playing in the field


Vegetation


Groceries in a cart Brick wall, blue door, and villager
Groceries in a cart


Brick wall, blue door, and villagers


Water buffalo and woman Stampede down the main street
Water buffalo and woman
A herd stampedes down the main street!


Donkey cart and fresh produce Found in the field
Donkey cart and fresh produce


Found in the field


Village area Cooking tools
Village area

Cooking tools






After compiling their color notations, each student selected three favorite colors and two least favorite colors for a composition based on the Bezold effect.


Example of the "Bezold Effect"
(Graphic from Color Logic, by Jill Morton)

Three colored areas on each circular form remain the same. Only the color of the stripes on top of the 3 pie-shaped areas changes. In the example above, the stripes change from blue at the left to yellow on the right. The transformational effect is quite amazing given the limited palette.

Students and faculty
Assistant Professor Rohma Khan (far left), textile students, and Jill Morton (center) Examples of some of the "Bezold Effect" studies are on the wall behind the group.


Looms
Looms in the textile studio at Beaconhouse National University, Tarogil, Pakistan


Jill Morton, March 2009

Color Logic



Colors of Pakistan Pages

Table of Contents


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Color Matters is a registered trademark of J.L. Morton.
Graphics and Text: Copyright (c) 1995-2009, J.L.Morton, All rights reserved

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