Description
Formal bag (pattern: Sounji pattern)
, Formal wallet (pattern: Sounji pattern)
, Notebook (pattern: Sharty tiger, red )
It is
not possible to wrap this item in a box because it is a grab bag. Please note that the package will be delivered in two pieces.
Please allow 2 weeks for delivery after receiving your order. Please understand that it takes about two weeks from the time of order to the time of delivery.
It will be delivered in two packages.
If you have any questions, please feel free to contact us.
Patterns
Gold Melon
A pattern of a fruit skin, grown by receiving the nature’s favor, shows the rich and various expression which provide artists with the beauty of a creative work.
The design of this brocade was modeled on melon skin which can never be thought by people’s sensibility, and the design was woven into the tasteful brocade with our refined weaving technique.
Kiku Momi(Brocade with Design of Crumple in Chrysanthemum Shape)
The pattern of this brocade is originated from a design of an artistic work on paper lacquered with silver and gold entitled to Ō-kiku-momi, meaning crumple in chrysanthemum-shape, having been
preserved in Kōetsu-ji temple in Kyoto made by Hon ,ami Kōetsu who lived in the Momoyama period (1573A.D.-1630A.D.) during which time the Japanese culture had ever been flourished, and was called a genius of all kinds of art.
This brocade is skillfully woven leaving the abstract and the three-dimentional effect of the original work.
Soun-ji Bundai-gire(Cloth Covering of a Writing Desk at Soun-ji Temple)
The design of this brocade is originated from a cloth which covered a writing desk and an inkstone case, preserved at Soun-ji Temple in Hakone, Kanagawa Prefecture, belonged to Sogi (1421-1502), the master of the "linked verse" type of poetry called renga, and is now designated as an Important Cultural Property. The original is a silver brocade with a ground filled with silvered paper stripes and patterned with a bine arabesque design of wild pink in colored yarns of green, maroon, and slight rouge.
Adding a modern device to the original brocade, the new brocade is woven with our technique leaving the exquisite harmony of tastefulness and luxury of the original material.
Taiko Mon
The brocade here was reproduced and adapted from a warp-patterned textile of H'ang times excavated from Noin-Ula, near Lake Baikal.
The open and hook-shaped motives repeated diagonally are extremely abstract animals whose details enable us to imagine in various ways such things as a long neck divided into two, a whirling head and a small double wing and a tail. In such a manner, this is a characteristic expression and is a theme for further investigation in future.
This piece is one of those reproduced from textiles preserved i n the Hermitage by courtesy of the Museum.