2018
DOI: 10.1007/s10668-018-0111-5
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A water footprint case study in Jarum village, Klaten, Indonesia: The production of natural-colored batik

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Cited by 21 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…Our result showed that the behaviour of this artisan was similar to our previous study which found that it is unusual for batik home industry artisan to measure the use of materials, such as water [13]. In addition, the process of making block-printed batik by natural dyeing was similar to that of hand-drawn batik as explained previously [5], except that drawing on the cloth is replaced by block-printing and degumming.…”
Section: Colours Of Block-printed Batik By the Application Of Differesupporting
confidence: 85%
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“…Our result showed that the behaviour of this artisan was similar to our previous study which found that it is unusual for batik home industry artisan to measure the use of materials, such as water [13]. In addition, the process of making block-printed batik by natural dyeing was similar to that of hand-drawn batik as explained previously [5], except that drawing on the cloth is replaced by block-printing and degumming.…”
Section: Colours Of Block-printed Batik By the Application Of Differesupporting
confidence: 85%
“…As indicated in Table 2, the copperas mordanted-cloth absorbed 16.20 g/m 2 Myrobalan dye, and 25.00 g/m 2 of Myrobalan dye was absorbed by the alum mordanted-cloth, and this difference could be related to the frequency of immersion. In comparison to our previous study, hand-drawn batik which is produced by natural dyeing used 120 g dye, 430 g of wax, and absorb 0.29 L of water per pc of 1.15 m x 2.50 m fabric [13], which are equal to 41.74 g/m 2 , 149.56 g/m 2 , and 0.10 L/m 2 dye, wax, and water, respectively. This study found that the block-printed batik in this study used less dyes in comparison to the hand-drawn batik, and this could be understood because this study only focused on a species of plant for dyeing, while the other batik SME used some species of plants in dyeing.…”
Section: Colours Of Block-printed Batik By the Application Of Differementioning
confidence: 70%
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“…Synthetic dyes used in the batik industry in Indonesia contribute to environmental pollution by producing waste which causes groundwater pollution (Kristijanto et al, 2011;Handayani et al, 2019). The environmental impact caused by synthetic dye waste must be reduced; one option is the use of natural dyes.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%