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  2. Japanese tissue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_tissue

    Japanese tissue should be water torn in the same process as described above, in a width and length sufficient to cover the hinge of the book with about 3/8 inch extension over the sides. Paste should be brushed on to the tissue, from the center outward, transferred to the hinge and then brushed down with a dry brush.

  3. Tissue-pack marketing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tissue-pack_marketing

    Tissue-pack marketing (ティッシュ配り, Tisshukubari) is a type of guerrilla marketing that attaches advertisements to portable facial tissue packages to move advertising copy directly into consumers' hands. Its origins date back to the late 1960s in Japan as a replacement for free promotional matchboxes, which were falling out of favor.

  4. Gift wrapping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gift_wrapping

    Prior to the introduction of tissue paper, upper-class Victorians in the west commonly used decorated and coloured thick paper to cover their gifts. [11] Modern patterned wrapping paper was introduced to the American market by the Hall Brothers in 1917. The Kansas City stationery store had run out of traditional white, red, and green monocolor ...

  5. Suzuri-bako - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suzuri-bako

    Suzuri-bako (硯箱; "inkstone box") are a type of Japanese writing box. The boxes are traditionally made of lacquered wood and are used to hold writing implements. [1] Historically, the boxes were associated with calligraphy, and as such they were made using high-quality materials designed to safeguard porcelain inkstones (suzuri) from damage. [2]

  6. Fukusa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fukusa

    Fukusa, the Gift Cover – the Beauty of Exchanging Gifts, catalogue for show organized by the Tokyo Metropolitan Foundation for History and Culture for the fukusa exhibit at the Kyoto National Museum, August 24–September 8, 1991. Fukusa, Japanese Gift Covers, by Takemura, Akihiko, 1991 (Iwasaki Bijutsu-sha, Tokyo). ISBN 4-7534-1325-X

  7. Furoshiki - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Furoshiki

    The first furoshiki cloths were tsutsumi ("wrapping"), used during the Nara period from 710 to 794 AD as protection for precious temple objects. [2] Known as furoshiki during the Muromachi period; the term furoshiki (literally "bath spread", from furo (風呂, "bath"), and shiki (敷, "spread")) [2] is said to have come about after high-ranking visitors to bathhouses packed their belongings in ...