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  2. Amigurumi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amigurumi

    Amigurumi (Japanese: 編みぐるみ, lit. "crocheted or knitted stuffed toy") is the Japanese art of knitting or crocheting small, stuffed yarn creatures. The word is a compound of the Japanese words 編み ami, meaning "crocheted or knitted", and 包み kurumi, literally "wrapping", as in 縫い包み nuigurumi "(sewn) stuffed doll". [1]

  3. Ikebana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ikebana

    Ikebana (生け花, 活け花, ' arranging flowers ' or ' making flowers alive ') is the Japanese art of flower arrangement. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] It is also known as kadō ( 華道 , ' way of flowers ' ) . The origin of ikebana can be traced back to the ancient Japanese custom of erecting evergreen trees and decorating them with flowers as yorishiro ...

  4. Sōgetsu-ryū - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sōgetsu-ryū

    The founder Sōfū Teshigahara in 1948. Sōgetsu was founded by Sōfū Teshigahara in 1927. [1] Sōfū's father was an ikebana master, who taught his son from childhood. Sōfū wanted to become a painter, but he found that the possibilities for creative expression in using green materials are endless, just as in pa

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  6. List of National Treasures of Japan (crafts: others) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_National_Treasures...

    Bodhisattva giving up his life so that a tiger family can feed their cubs; illustration of a Jataka tale on the base of the Tamamushi Shrine. The term "National Treasure" has been used in Japan to denote cultural properties since 1897, [1] [2] although the definition and the criteria have changed since the introduction of the term.

  7. Chabana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chabana

    Chabana (茶花, literally "tea flowers") is a generic term for the arrangement of flowers put together for display at a Japanese tea ceremony, and also for the wide variety of plants conventionally considered as appropriate material for such use, as witnessed by the existence of such encyclopedic publications as the Genshoku Chabana Daijiten ...

  8. Japanese craft - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_craft

    The art of Japanese bamboo weaving in patterns such as kagome (籠目) is well known; its name is composed from the words kago (basket) and me (eyes), referring to the pattern of holes found in kagome, where laths woven in three directions (horizontally, diagonally left and diagonally right) create a pattern of trihexagonal tiling.

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