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  2. Waraji - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waraji

    Waraji over indigo-blue tabi, the sock colour digitally altered for clarity Similar four- and six-warp Chinese sandals, c. 1930 (other views). Waraji (草鞋 ( わらじ )) (Japanese pronunciation: [w̜aɺadʑi]) are light tie-on sandals, made from (usually straw) ropemaking fibers, that were the standard footwear of the common people in Japan.

  3. Moshulu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moshulu

    Moshulu is a four-masted steel barque, built as Kurt by William Hamilton and Company at Port Glasgow in Scotland in 1904. The largest remaining original windjammer , she is currently a floating restaurant docked in Penn's Landing , Philadelphia .

  4. The Last Grain Race - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Last_Grain_Race

    The four-masted barque Moshulu, the ship on which Eric Newby sailed.She is today a restaurant ship at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States.. Newby finds out that his advertising agency, the Wurzel Agency, has lost a lucrative cereal account and he decides to write to Gustav Erikson of Mariehamn for a place on one of his grain ships, having been inspired with tales of the sea by an old ...

  5. Zori - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zori

    Zori (/ ˈ z ɔː r i /), also rendered as zōri (Japanese: 草履 ( ぞうり ), Japanese pronunciation: [d͡zo̞ːɾʲi]), are thonged Japanese sandals made of rice straw, cloth, lacquered wood, leather, rubber, or—most commonly and informally—synthetic materials. [1] They are a slip-on descendant of the tied-on waraji sandal. [2]

  6. File:Moshulu.jpg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Moshulu.jpg

    English: The Moshulu was built in 1904. That odd looking thing under the bow is a partly-sunken work float which is used to help maintain the ship, one of two. In 2010 it sank completely and in 2011 it is being re-floated.

  7. Bakezōri - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bakezōri

    Design model of the Bakezōri may have been Zōri, traditional sandals made of braided rice straw. [1] [2]The being Bakezōri belongs to a special group of Yōkai, called Tsukumogami (付喪神; "artifact-demons"): According to Japanese folklore, households are like repair tools, kitchen appliances and even clothes of any kind which eventually come to life and receive their own consciousness ...

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