"Rank badge for a sixth-rank civil official showing a pair of egrets (lesser white herons). One bird stands in rippling water which, together with the polychrome rocks, forms the base of the picture. The other bird is in flight between cloud bands at the top. On each side of the centred birds is a large lotus plant in flower.\nThe badge is executed in tapestry weave (kesi). It is a weft-faced plain weave with white silk warps and polychrome silk and metal-wrapped wefts. The wefts are discontinuous in that they do not travel from selvedge to selvedge but in some places they are carried from one segment of design to another of the same colour, forming non-structural 'floats'. The reverse side of the badge is, therefore, apparent. In order to facilitate the pictorial effect of the design the wefts have been intentionally woven out of regular alignment with the warps so that they are no longer horizontal to the warps (eccentric wefts). There are also some eccentric outlining wefts. Adjacent areas of colour are ended with slit tapestry joins."@en . . . .