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  2. Japanese tea ceremony - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_tea_ceremony

    For this reason, most tea ceremonies are conducted in kimono, and though students may practice wearing Western clothes, students of tea ceremony will need to wear kimono at some point. On formal occasions, the host of the tea ceremony will always wear kimono, and for guests, formal kimono or Western formal wear must be worn. No matter the style ...

  3. Grand Kitano Tea Ceremony - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grand_Kitano_Tea_Ceremony

    Grand Kitano Tea Gathering monument at Kitano Tenmangu shrine, Kyoto. The Grand Kitano Tea Ceremony (Japanese: 北野大茶湯, Hepburn: Kitano ōchanoyu), also known in English as the Grand Kitano Tea Gathering, was a large Japanese tea ceremony event that was hosted by the regent and chancellor Toyotomi Hideyoshi at Kitano Tenmangū shrine in Kyoto on the first day of the tenth month in the ...

  4. List of items traditionally worn in Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_items...

    A style of haori, formerly more widespread but in modern times generally worn only by male practitioners of tea ceremony. Jittoku are made of unlined silk gauze, fall to the hip, and have sewn himo ties at the front made of the same fabric as the main garment. The jittoku has a wrist opening that is entirely open along the sleeve's vertical length.

  5. Omotesenke - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Omotesenke

    The front gate to the Omotesenke Fushin'an estate, Kyoto. Omotesenke (表千家) is one of the schools of Japanese tea ceremony.Along with Urasenke and Mushakōjisenke, it is one of the three lines of the Sen family descending from Sen no Rikyū, which together are known as the san-Senke or "three Sen houses/families" (三千家).

  6. Geisha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geisha

    At the Kitano Tenman-gū shrine there is an annual open-air tea ceremony (野点, nodate) during the plum-blossom festival (梅花祭, baikasai) every February 25. During this ceremony, geisha and maiko from the Kamishichiken district in northwest Kyoto serve tea to 3,000 guests.

  7. Hakama - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hakama

    Women do not wear hakama at tea ceremony. The image of women in kimono and hakama are culturally associated with school teachers. Just as university professors in Western countries don their academic caps and gowns when their students graduate, many female school teachers in Japan attend annual graduation ceremonies in traditional kimono with ...

  8. Kimono - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kimono

    The fabrics that kimono are made from are classified in two categories within Japan. Gofuku (呉服) is the term used to indicate silk kimono fabrics, composed of the characters go (呉, the Japanese pronunciation of "Wu"), referring to the State of Wu in ancient China where silk weaving technology developed, and fuku (服, meaning "clothing").

  9. List of Important Tangible Folk Cultural Properties - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Important_Tangible...

    2,163 articles including 1,945 clay pagodas, 101 articles related to the mondōe (万燈会) ten thousand lantern ceremony, 60 tea bowls for the ōbukucha (皇服茶) New Year Tea ceremony and 57 other items Rokuharamitsu-ji, Kyoto, Kyoto: Collection of oshirasama dolls (おしらさまコレクション, oshirasama korekushon) 1.6, 2.3

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