Ko-bukusa Cloth (Tea-things) (persia-keikamon)

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

Ko-bukusa Cloth (Tea-things) (persia-keikamon)

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

Ko-bukusa Cloth (Tea-things) (persia-keikamon)

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

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  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Ko-bukusa Cloth (Tea-things) (persia-keikamon)
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Ko-bukusa Cloth (Tea-things) (persia-keikamon)

Regular price
¥4,950 (Tax included.)
Sale price
¥4,950 (Tax included.)
Regular price
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Unit price
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Tatsumura Saki products are used by many people who enjoy the tea ceremony. The various beautiful patterns of the textiles add a touch of beauty to tea ceremonies even today. Please enjoy the beauty of the textiles that casually and lustrously decorate the hands of those who handle tea utensils.


Wrapping : Gift wrapping service available

Size (cm) : W16.0×H15.0

Detail

Product : Ko-bukusa Cloth (Tea-things) (persia-keikamon)
Type : 古帛紗
Size (cm) : W16.0×H15.0
Tags : 130th anniversary object-3stoatWrapping availableOriental ZodiacPattern_Persian chicken flower designTea utensilsfukusaRoosterbirdchicken
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

An item for tea ceremony, good for interior decoration, too.

Patterns

Persia Kei-ka-mon(Brocade of Persian Design with Cock and Flower)

The design of this brocade is modeled after the pattern of the Persian fabrics made in the 6th-7th century, AD which consists of a cock in a medallion surrounded by a brilliant flower crest deployed in the geometric pattern. The medallion patterns are often seen on the silverwares and in the fabrics made in Sassanian Persia which had spread to the East and the West. The one migrated to the East along the Silk Road was adopted in the gorgeous textile fabrics in China, some of which were brought to Japan and have been kept in Shoso-in Imperial Repository in Nara and admired as the Persian-like-design fabrics. We have made into warp-patterned brocade with our original design imaging nostalgically of the ancient days and places of the Silk Road.