daizawaguy
Call Me a Cab
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- 2,661
- Location
- Tokyo
The shop in Asakusa, downtown Tokyo
These kinds of bags are called gassai-bukuro or Shingen-bukuro and have been in use for hundreds of years, mostly by men, but occasionally by women. It's been traditionally used to carry odds and ends since kimonos don't have pockets. Wallets, keys, tissues--or rather, what amounts to tissues in the western world-- memos and papers if neccessary. It's carried by the strings, wound around one's wrist.feltfan said:For what do you use your bag? For what are they used
traditionally? How do you carry it?
They aren't closures, they are hooks to pass the string through. They do look like ivory, and I think some antique ones are, but today, the most likely material is bamboo--okay, I checked the one I have and it's plastic . The bag is closed by pulling the strings from both ends.Tomasso said:Interesting. What is the material at the closure that looks like ivory?
On second though, it originally might have been deer horns, with those made from deer hide. Ivory as in elephant tusks would have been non-existent as material, save for imported artifacts, but deer horns and boar tusks would have been available.Tomasso said:Interesting. What is the material at the closure that looks like ivory?
I considered that as well. But, then I thought of the extravagant nature of the Japanese elite. And I mean that as a complement. Seriously, nobody tends to the details like you folks.LaMedicine said:On second though, it originally might have been deer horns
Tomasso said:Seriously, nobody tends to the details like (the Japanese).
Tomasso said:Interesting. What is the material at the closure that looks like ivory?