- First time at Yoshioka's studio meets the world of dyed goods I was touched by the depth of the depth. I would like more people to know more people It was a world that could be called mystery.
- Murasaki - The color of the Japanese tradition. The film is artisan documentary in Kyoto. A beautiful color and artisan's dreams. Sachio Yoshioka is the present head of a Dyeing Company "Dye maker Yoshioka" following Japan Kyoto from the Edo era. Colors made from a clear spring and plant of Kyoto bring on beauty and depth more than the chemistry dye and attract us.—Mika Kawase
- Although humans also use fire, the images of the workshops, which use water more than that, are full of such impressions. The bulge of the safflower in both hands, the smell that is not easily concealed by the plants to be squeezed, the wonder that these things will be reborn as "color" which only touches the eyes. "Shuji-no-kai (water removal)" is held every year at Todaiji Temple in February, but the artificial flower of Tsubaki that decorates the front of the Buddha is made of Japanese paper dyed at Mr. Yoshioka's workshop. In the Februo temple, I feel that the movie "purple" made us glimpse the hometown of the color of the camellia, which blooms one step beyond this world.—Todaiji Temple Doctor, Kouei Hashimura.
- Yakushiji is a temple that is known as Mr. Sanzan, known as Genkanzan, but Mr. Yoshioka participates from the project and restores the trip of Genki's recruitment as "Gigaku". Costumes reproduced by the same traditional dyeing technique as in the Nara era have warmth in glamours and make us feel the beauty of nature. "Murasaki" will entertain the Japanese color because of the delicate color making use of the grace of the four seasons more.—Yakushiji Temple, Taiin Murakami.
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