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Noren Japanese door curtain polyester 150x85cm Kozan-ji Choju-Giga Ephemeral

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Now: US$ 68.00
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Description

(Size) : Apporox. Width 85 x Length 150 cm / 33.46 x 59.05 inch

(Material) : 100% Polyester

(Origin) : Made in Japan

(Condition) : Brand new

(Note) :


Choju-giga is a paper-based ink-painting picture scroll handed down at Kozanji Temple in Kyoto, created from the late Heian period to the early Kamakura period.
Choju-giga consists of four volumes, Kou, Otsu, Hei, and Tei, but the most representative one is the first volume(Kou), which depicts small animals playing and having fun like people, and is still familiar to many people today.
It is also said to be the oldest manga in Japan, as effects similar to those used in modern manga can be seen.

*This item is a built-to-order item.
Craftsman will start producing each item after I received an order.
Since it's all handmade, it will take about 2 weeks until it's finished.

*The item is not split in the middle.
There is a cut line in the middle that wouldn’t loose even if it’s cut with a pair scissors.
This race fablic can let the light go through moderately.

The Noren is originally used for the entrance of the house for the light removal.
Currently I think that it is often seen at the entrance of the shop as a restaurant noren but it is used as a partition, even in everyday life.

It is also a feature of Noren that you can easily change the atmosphere of the room by hiding the back of the house from the entrance at the time of visiting,using the goods as a partition of the room and blindfold.
As a used scene gift Birthday / marriage / Father's Day / Mother's Day / Senior Citizen's Day
/ Graduation / Admission / Opening / Gifts / Valentine's Day / White Day / Christmas

As an interior
Partition / Image Up / Japanese Style / Japanese Pattern / New Life / Alone Living
Single Room / Living / New Construction / Moving / Interior

-Noren history-
Noren are short cloth curtains hung on the entrances to Japanese shops. Beginning with the scraps of cloth on hanging screens used in Zen temples to ward off cold, merchant houses since the Edo Period(1603-1867) have put their names on noren and used them in business. The word "noren," is also used to signify good will and credit of a shop as its symbol.

 

Weight:
500.00 Grams

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