Furoshiki (Japanese Wraping Cloth) (60x60cm) (Shishi-tori Oji)

*The pattern may be different from the image shown due to the cutting process

Furoshiki (Japanese Wraping Cloth) (60x60cm) (Shishi-tori Oji)

*The pattern may be different from the image shown due to the cutting process

Furoshiki (Japanese Wraping Cloth) (60x60cm) (Shishi-tori Oji)

*The pattern may be different from the image shown due to the cutting process

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  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Furoshiki (Japanese Wraping Cloth) (60x60cm) (Shishi-tori Oji)

Furoshiki (Japanese Wraping Cloth) (60x60cm) (Shishi-tori Oji)

Regular price
¥22,000 (Tax included.)
Sale price
¥22,000 (Tax included.)
Regular price
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Unit price
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A little thoughtfulness that can be seen when wrapping and delivering something important will gently connect the feelings between people. Please wrap the giver's heart in a traditional textile and send it to them.


Wrapping : Gift wrapping service available

Detail

Product : Furoshiki (Japanese Wraping Cloth) (60x60cm) (Shishi-tori Oji)
Type : 風呂敷
Tags : ペルシャWrapping availableJapanese AccessoriesPattern_Shishitori-Oji
Other : The pattern may be different from the image shown due to the cutting process. Please understand this in advance.
Other : Gift wrapping service available

Reviews

Description

Furoshiki with popular design of "Meibutsu-gire (specialty cloth)" design.

Patterns

Shishi-tori Ōji(Brocade with Design of Hunting-lion Prince)

This vigorous design of a hero holding a lion in each arm is said to have depicted the legendary Mesopotamian king Gilgamesh who was written in the "Epic of Gilgamesh" recorded in the twelve cuneiform-inscribed clay tablets out of the tens of thousand pieces unearthed from the excavation site of the old Assyrian library. The symmetric pattern drawn in the roundel like this fabric was the typical design of the textiles woven in the Sassanid dynasty, Persia, whereas the design of holding a lion in an arm had been seen in the rel ieves of the palace in the Assyrian era. This design is modeled after an ancient fabric woven in the Middle East approximately in the 10th century AD probably for exporting to the west that we produced into warp-patterned brocade keeping the vigorous atmosphere.