Ji Ze folk cloth is a pure cotton hand-made jacquard textile, commonly known as "coarse cloth". It is woven using the ancient weaving and dyeing method (a weaving and dyeing technique that has been passed down from the time of Huang Dao Po to the present day) (commonly known as old cloth). The cloth craft has a long history. The earliest record of Zengzi's mother weaving cloth was in "Strategies of the Warring States". During the Yuan and Ming Dynasties, with the large-scale planting of cotton in the Yellow River Basin, it became more and more common to use cotton as a raw material for spinning and weaving. People combined traditional kudzu, hemp, and silk weaving techniques with cotton spinning techniques. The craftsmanship at that time was relatively rough, the colors were monotonous, and the varieties were relatively few. With the improvement of textile tools in the Ming and Qing Dynasties, the weaving and printing and dyeing techniques of folk cloth have been greatly improved, and cotton planting, spinning, and weaving have gradually formed a scale. The patterns of folk cloth in Jize include two-piece silk, four-piece silk, jacquard shaking pattern, walnut pattern, foreign devil drilling mountain, a road to Beijing, five-frame mountain, seven-frame mountain, large twill, small twill, pomegranate big blossom, jujube flower, cloth pattern, cloth couplet, etc. In the 1970s, the rural family textile industry in Jize reached its heyday. The county had more than 30,000 cloth looms, and more than 50,000 rural women were engaged in weaving during the slack season. Almost every family in the village had a loom, and each household had two or three spinning wheels. Every household could independently carry out the whole set of processes such as spinning, sizing, warping, rinsing, weaving, and dyeing. At this time, people conducted research, reform and development in textile technology, and produced many products with fine weaving and dyeing technology, including words and phrases of cloth, couplets of cloth, bean flour cloth, printed and dyed cloth, etc., most of which were used by farm girls for marriage. With the advent of the commercialization and mechanization era, the homespun craft has been impacted by modern textiles and has become silent. In recent years, with the continuous improvement of people's living standards, people have a new understanding of homespun. Homespun is used to make various products, which are healthy and comfortable to use, and are relatively expensive. Therefore, a group of women in rural areas spin and weave during their spare time, inheriting and developing this homespun craft that has been passed down for thousands of years.