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  2. Tatami - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tatami

    In Japan, the size of a room is usually measured in relation to the size of tatami mats (-畳, -jō), about 1.653 m 2 (17.79 sq ft) for a standard Nagoya-size tatami. Alternatively, in terms of traditional Japanese area units , room area (and especially house floor area) is measured in terms of tsubo , where one tsubo is the area of two tatami ...

  3. Reed mat (craft) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reed_mat_(craft)

    The supple mats made by this process of weaving without a loom are widely used in Thai homes. These mats are also now being made into shopping bags, place mats, and decorative wall hangings. One popular kind of Thai mat is made from a kind of reed known as Kachud, which grows in the southern marshes. After the reeds are harvested, they are ...

  4. Housing in Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Housing_in_Japan

    In the 1980s, a new home in Japan cost 5-8 times the annual income of the average Japanese, and 2-3 times that of an average American. [9] The typical loan term for Japanese homes was 20 years, with a 35% down payment, while in the United States it was 30 years and 25%, due to differing practices in their financial markets.

  5. Chashitsu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chashitsu

    A tea room may have a floor area as small as 1.75 tatami mats (one full tatami mat for the guests plus a tatami mat called a daime (台目), about 3/4 the length of a full tatami mat, for the portable brazier (furo) or sunken hearth (ro) to be situated and the host to sit and prepare the tea); or as large as 10 tatami mats or more; 4.5 mats is ...

  6. Japanese tea ceremony - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_tea_ceremony

    Purpose-built tea rooms have a sunken hearth in the floor which is used in winter. A special tatami is used which has a cut-out section providing access to the hearth. In summer, the hearth is covered either with a small square of extra tatami, or, more commonly, the hearth tatami is replaced with a full mat, totally hiding the hearth.

  7. Shoji - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shoji

    The jigumi kumiko are generally joined with simple halved joints, [32] but where jigumi kumiko cross at a non-right-angle, or three cross at the same point (mitsu-kude [33]), the angles can become complicated, [27] [34] and specialized tools are used to cut them rapidly. [35] Small kumiko may simply be friction-fitted and glued. [32]