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It is said that originally, it was installed to protect walls from mud kicked up by horses and the urine of dogs and cats passing under eaves, but it is also said that it was used to make it difficult for thieves to enter homes and, in the past, was often used in Kyoto shops for confidential consultations, to prevent eavesdropping by putting ears to the wall, in other words, to keep people away from the walls.
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Free membership registrationA hogaki is a type of fence made by suspending branches, giving it a soft impression.
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Free membership registrationA narrow fence attached to a building. Regardless of the materials or shapes used, such fences are collectively referred to as such. Primarily created for privacy, they also serve as decorative elements in gardens. Materials used include wood, bamboo (round bamboo, crushed bamboo, split bamboo), shino bamboo, bamboo shoots, sod, bush clover, black wood, cedar bark, and ajiro (woven bamboo). Based on the materials, shapes, or arrangements of bamboo, they are given names such as shibagaki, shimizugaki, teppogaki, ajirogaki, cedar bark small ajirogaki, hishigaki, ya no takegaki, tachi ai gaki, and korai gaki. Various names are also assigned to specific features in their construction, such as windows, round windows, armor shapes, openwork, lattice, diamond patterns, torches, small waits, mist, soutan preferences, bush clover disorder, tea whisks, shigure, double-sided, teppou, wheels, and gatherings.
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Free membership registration"Suikya window" using bamboo for the makeup frame. Please enjoy the world of Japanese aesthetics.
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Free membership registrationA "chabudai" refers to a simple and movable floor space, typically constructed with a support post to create a platform-like structure. Chabudai is used as a substitute when there is no formal space for a tokonoma, and is often placed in the corners of a Japanese-style room.
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Free membership registrationPlease enjoy the bench and table made from natural Japanese cedar.
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Free membership registration- Few bends and cracks - Extremely excellent moisture absorption and release properties
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Free membership registration- Few bends and cracks - Extremely excellent moisture absorption and release properties
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Free membership registrationThe "Suikinkutsu" is said to be a technique devised by gardeners during the Edo period to enhance the aesthetic of Japanese gardens, and it is considered one of the masterpieces of landscaping technology. It was primarily created in the water basins placed at the entrance of tea rooms (tsukubai) or on the edge of the veranda. The structure involves burying a jar upside down with a small hole in the garden, allowing water that overflows from the handwashing basin or tsukubai to drip down and fall onto the water surface accumulated at the bottom, creating a type of sound device that resonates within the jar. It came to be called "Suikinkutsu" because it produces sounds similar to that of a koto (Japanese harp). Suikinkutsu were created across the country from the Meiji to the Taisho and early Showa periods.
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Free membership registrationItem Number: 77-10 Item Name: Waterwheel (Charred Cedar) 2 Shaku (approximately 600 mm) - 251,000 yen 2.5 Shaku (approximately 750 mm) - 312,000 yen 3 Shaku (approximately 900 mm) - 377,000 yen 4 Shaku (approximately 1200 mm) - 626,000 yen 5 Shaku (approximately 1500 mm) - 1,565,000 yen 6 Shaku (approximately 1800 mm) - 2,200,000 yen *Items over 4.0 Shaku are made to order.
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