When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: kokka fabrics japan

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Kokka - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kokka

    Kokka (國華) (lit. 'Flower of the Nation') is a periodical of East Asian art , first issued in October 1889. Kokka was established by Okakura Tenshin , journalist Takahashi Kenzō ( 高橋健三 ) , and a patron of the arts who sought to challenge the primacy of Western art in Meiji Japan.

  3. Kijōka-bashōfu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kijōka-bashōfu

    Kijōka-bashōfu (喜如嘉の芭蕉布) is the Japanese craft of making cloth from the bashō or Japanese fibre banana as practiced in Kijōka in Ogimi, Okinawa. Like linen , hemp , ramie and other long vegetable fibres, it does not stick to the skin in hot weather; as such it is suitable for the climate of Okinawa . [ 1 ]

  4. Japanese craft - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_craft

    Traditional craft began to wane, and disappeared in many areas, as tastes and production methods changed. Forms such as swordmaking became obsolete. Japanese scholar Okakura Kakuzō wrote against the fashionable primacy of western art and founded the periodical Kokka (國華, lit. ' Flower of the Nation ') to draw attention to the issue ...

  5. Kaihara Denim - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kaihara_Denim

    Kaihara Denim (カイハラ) is a Japanese fabric mill originally founded as Marusu (㋜) in 1893 as an indigo kasuri producer. [1] Its name is written in katakana and refers to its founder, Kaihara Sukejiro (貝原助治郎), who established Kaihara Textile Mills Ltd. in 1951.

  6. Tsumugi (cloth) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tsumugi_(cloth)

    An unlined (hitoe) kimono made from tsumugi, showing soft drape.Tsumugi (紬) is a traditional slub-woven silk fabric from Japan.It is a tabby weave material woven from yarn produced using silk noil, short-staple silk fibre (as opposed to material produced using longer, filament yarn silk fibres).

  7. Traditional colors of Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Traditional_colors_of_Japan

    The traditional colors of Japan trace their historical origins to the Twelve Level Cap and Rank System which was established in 603 by Prince Shōtoku and based on the five Chinese elements. In this system, rank and social hierarchy were displayed and determined by certain colors.