Podcast in English
Text size
Bulgarian National Radio © 2024 All Rights Reserved

Irene Velichkova-Yamami lives in Japan, but does not stop ‎embroidering... Bulgaria

The embroidered map of Bulgaria arrived from Japan, Irene donated it ‎to the National History Museum

Photo: Gergana Mancheva

The name of the Bulgarian Irenе Velichkova-Yamami is mostly associated with ‎her long-term research on embroidery, which has been perfected over the ‎centuries and has turned from a widespread craft in the past into a valuable art ‎form in the present day. And since fewer and fewer people today have the time ‎and patience for embroidery, Irene Velichkova-Yamami sets out to find and ‎describe the types of stitches and the figures achieved with them. She has ‎collected valuable information around Bulgaria and during her travels around ‎the world. She has preserved everything in her books "Archaic symbols in ‎embroidery", "Bulgaria in needlework" and as an author in an almanac of ‎world embroidery.‎

In 2014, Irenе Velichkova set out to realize one of her most ambitious and ‎colorful ideas - to sew a Bulgarian flag in embroidery. The unique thing here is ‎that the map of Bulgaria is presented on a canvas with a width of 1.40 m, but ‎instead of the names of the cities, the embroideries characteristic of the ‎traditional costume of the respective area are embroidered there. ‎


The idea was provoked by a map of Bulgaria from 1929, made by the ‎renowned folklorist Hristo Vakarelski, on which the traditional costumes of the ‎individual geographical areas are presented. Then Irene told herself that she was ‎the person who could and should put together a map with real embroiderers ‎from different ethnographic areas of Bulgaria. The fact that the master of the ‎‎"exquisite stitch" has been living in Japan for 35 years now actually ‎turned out to be a real advantage for her homeland-loving work. In addition to ‎attracting the interest of her followers in Japan, she was able to show the map ‎with embroidery from her homeland at various international exhibitions. With ‎it she has traveled to Tokyo, San Francisco, Hamburg, Sofia, Veliko Tarnovo. ‎

Seven years after the completion of this ethnographic work, the Map of Bulgaria ‎in embroidery has arrived permanently in Sofia. It was donated to the National ‎History Museum and recently took its place behind the showcase in the ‎Ethnography Hall. ‎

‎"I am very happy about the fact that the "Map of Bulgaria in Embroidery" is ‎now at home, in the true sense of the word. Museums are the guardians of the ‎memory of a nation, of its historical past, it is the basis for a constructive ‎future," says Irene Velichkova-Yamami. ‎
"It took me a year to make the whole panel. It contains 144 embroidery ‎patterns characteristic of the respective region of the country. About ten types ‎of stitches are used. To be just like a real flag, this map was consecrated in the ‎Orthodox Church of Saint Alexander Nevsky in Tokyo in 2016. I carry the ‎Bulgarian embroidery in my genes, one of my grandmothers is a Kapanka ‎‎/a colourful ethnographic group from Northern Bulgaria - note ed./. My other ‎grandmother is from Dupnitsa and I have always seen embroideries and ‎knitwork around me, and as a child I also used to help her in weaving on a ‎loom. Every type of needlework that was traditional for the Bulgarian women ‎has passed through my hands.” ‎

I rarely return to Bulgaria, once every 4-5 years, but I explain the turning of ‎Bulgarians back to their roots with the difficult situation in which the country ‎is”, Irene Velichkova - Yamami tells Radio Bulgaria. “One must have ‎something to lean on in order to survive a difficult time of deprivation. Of ‎course, traditions still have a place nowadays, but in Bulgaria we see a massive ‎return to traditional dances, embroidery and everything related to folklore. The ‎case with us is a little more difficult, because we have yet to realize where our ‎troubles come from. Bulgarians must wake up and understand what wealth this ‎country has, but they do not know how to use it." ‎


Irene Velichkova-Yamami makes a comparison between her homeland and the ‎country she has lived in for decades: "In Japan, when you say your’ a ‎foreigner, people understand America. But when they touch the colorful ‎culture of Bulgaria, everyone remains fascinated, intoxicated and even in love ‎with our country. Their attitude towards Bulgaria is very good, cordial and ‎understanding, because they value tradition. It's like that with them - tradition ‎is valued very highly also in terms of dignity," adds Mrs. Yamami.‎

"Having lived for 35 years in a country where tradition is held in the highest ‎esteem and preserved without any modern interference, I also began to search ‎for a deeper meaning in tradition. I would like to wish the Bulgarian women ‎dealing with embroidery to respect the real old and authentic embroidery ‎patterns which have withstood the test of time and, along with the Thracian ‎gold treasures, are part of Bulgaria’s overall cultural heritage, which forms us as ‎a nation."‎



Read more about Bulgarian embroidery:


Photos: Gergana Mancheva, Serdica Gallery, National History Museum


Translated and published by Rositsa Petkova


Последвайте ни и в Google News Showcase, за да научите най-важното от деня!
Listen to the daily news from Bulgaria presented in "Bulgaria Today" podcast, available in Spotify.

More from category

Bakadzhik monastery has preserved relics from the National Liberation of Bulgaria

Volunteers joined the efforts to clean and restore the monastery St. Spas near Bakadzhik peak. The campaign is being organized on 2 November by Stoimen Petrov, mayor of the nearby village of Chargan, the Bulgarian news agency BTA reports. The..

published on 11/2/24 8:30 AM

On Archangel All Souls' Day believers honour the dead and give alms

There are three special days on the calendar of the Bulgarian Orthodox church, on which believers pray to God and give alms to honour the memory of their dear departed. The three All Souls’ Days always fall on the Saturdays before Meat..

published on 11/2/24 4:30 AM

The secret mission of a Zeppelin L 59 or how Yambol went down in history with a world record

One frosty November morning in 1917, as World War I was raging, a Zeppelin L 59 took off from the air base near Yambol bound for Tanzania. The purpose of the flight was to deliver ammunition and materials to the German military units in a remote..

updated on 11/1/24 11:32 AM