Detail
Product : | Dashi-fukusa Cloth (O-meibutsu-gire) (Tea-things) (Jimbutsutemba Mon Tategasuri) |
---|---|
Type : | 出帛紗 |
Size (cm) : | W27.0×H28.0 |
Tags : | 130th anniversary object-3、 stoat、 Wrapping available、 Great masterpiece、 Pattern_Kyokasuri with human figure and horse design、 Tea utensils、 fukusa、 |
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
Dashi-fukusa is used in the Omotesenke school, one of the tea ceremony schools.
Fukusa is made from the finest brocade that has been carefully woven. This is the best item that you would like to use for a special tea ceremony. It is popular as an accompaniment to a tea ceremony or as a gift.
[Restoration of Meibutsu-gire]
The founder, Heizo Tatsumura, raised the status of textiles to the level of art as a leading figure through the restoration of ancient textiles and famous textiles. That spirit has been passed down through generations and continues to this day. Knowledge gained from thorough research on ancient textiles from raw materials, technology acquired by knowing all kinds of techniques.
The comprehensive power of weaving that makes full use of these is the basis for restoring ancient textiles.
Patterns
Jinbutsu Ten-ba-mon Tate-kasuri (Design of People and Flying Horse in Kasuri-like Weave)
This design is modeled after a fabric for a pouch for a tea caddy used by Sen-no-Rikyu (1522~1591 AD), the master of tea ceremony. This brocade looks like woven in kasuri-weaving (splashed pattern) technique but it is not. Similar designs are seen even today in cotton kasuri fabrics made in Pulau Sumba, Indonesia.