Japanese textiles dolls ceramics kanzashi by Asian Art by Kyoko
All Items : Vintage Arts : Regional Art : Asian : Japanese : Textiles : Pre 1980 item #964281
Asian Art By Kyoko
Sold. Thank you!
Japanese uchikake (wedding gown) with a colorful design of flowers and birds done in the Tsujigahana-zome (dye) style. The old Tsujigahana dye technique was used on the clothing of the Muromachi to Momoyama period elites. Inside the tie dyed area, flowers and birds were painted with blue, purple and black ink. Tsujigahana-dye was short lived and completely vanished by the early 17th century because of its extreme complexity...
All Items : Vintage Arts : Regional Art : Asian : Japanese : Textiles : Pre 1980 item #460146
Asian Art By Kyoko
Sold. Thank you!
Elegant Japanese kimono wedding gown (Uchikake) designed by Hanae Mori. The gown displays the designer’s logo without a signature; her butterflies and initials are woven all over the red liner. Hanae Mori is truly the first and most famous international Japanese designer of the 20th century. She not only contributed to the Japanese clothing industry but to many other areas since the rebuilding time of Japan after WWII...
All Items : Vintage Arts : Regional Art : Asian : Japanese : Dolls : Pre 1980 item #576294
Asian Art By Kyoko
Sold. Thank you!
Japanese Kimekomi hina ningyo (dolls), Dairi bina, emperor and empress doll. Kimekomi dolls were originally carved out of willow trees growing on the riverbank of the Kamo River in Kyoto. They were made using the leftover material from Kamo Shrine. Today, the dolls are made out of paulownia sawdust mixed with glue. This method was developed by Kanabayashi Mataro (1897-1984). Each section is divided by grooves and each block is covered with brocades...
All Items : Vintage Arts : Regional Art : Asian : Japanese : Textiles : Pre 1940 item #1032666
Asian Art By Kyoko
Sold. Thank you!
This is an antique men's silk juban, an undergarment worn under a kimono. For today’s standards, it is very odd to see such an extravagant hidden personal item. During the Edo period, which ended in 1868, common people were not allowed to wear silk. The growing economical power of merchants came along with social disorder and corruption. The Tokugawa government issued many sumptuary laws to limit the spending of the general people on luxury items...