enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. We're Totally Embracing Boho with These 20 Living Room Ideas

    www.aol.com/were-totally-embracing-boho-20...

    Brilliant Boho Style. Leave it to design-world insider and PR maven Christina Juarez to drench her New York apartment in color and pattern. The living room features a mix of prints, including ...

  3. 20 Ideas for Creating a Boho Living Room in 2021

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/20-ideas-creating-boho...

    Disclaimer: 2021’s answer to boho is taking the pattern-filled, maximalist look we’ve seen for years and turning it upside down (because at this point, what do we... 20 Ideas for Creating a ...

  4. Washitsu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Washitsu

    Many new construction Japanese apartments have no washitsu at all, instead using linoleum or hardwood floors. The size of a washitsu is measured by the number of tatami mats, using the counter word jō (畳), which, depending on the area, are between 1.5 m 2 and 1.8 m 2. (See tatami.) Typical room sizes are six or eight tatami mats in a private ...

  5. 20 Ideas for Creating a Boho Living Room in 2021

    www.aol.com/entertainment/20-ideas-creating-boho...

    For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us

  6. Housing in Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Housing_in_Japan

    Additionally, advertisements quote the sizes of the rooms—most importantly, the living room—with measurements in tatami mats (jō (畳) in Japanese), traditional mats woven from rice straw that are standard sizes: 176 by 88 cm (69 by 35 in) in the Tokyo region and 191 cm by 95.5 cm in western Japan. "2DK; one six-tatami Japanese-style room ...

  7. Tokonoma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tokonoma

    A tokonoma with a kakemono and ikebana flower arrangement Detailed view of a tokonoma and aspects of a Japanese room View from the side of a tokonoma Tokonoma at Tenryū-ji. A tokonoma (床の間), [1] or simply toko (床), [2] [3] is a recessed space in a Japanese-style reception room, in which items for artistic appreciation are displayed.

  8. Shoin-zukuri - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shoin-zukuri

    Shoin-zukuri (Japanese: 書院造, 'study room architecture') is a style of Japanese architecture developed in the Muromachi, Azuchi–Momoyama and Edo periods that forms the basis of today's traditional-style Japanese houses.

  9. 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 ...