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[personal profile] gurdymonkey
1. January 24, 2009, Barack Hussein Obama is sworn in as President of the United States.
March 5, 2009, there is $10 more in my paycheck this week than in any previous paycheck for the year 2009.
That's what I call fast work.

2. There have been a number of "Ooh, shiny!" responses to my post of yesterday regarding the kaga chochin project. There has not been a single, "Did the Japanese use that particular weaving pattern in their basketry and would it have been used for a kaga chochin?" question.

Honestly? Before God and all the neighbors? I couldn't tell you. I do know that the basic hexagonal basket weave mimicked by the other cane I intended to use is one of the weaves used for baskets in a number of cultures, Japan included. The star variant I'd never seen before and I let my own "Ooh, shiny!" impulse allow me to buy $12 worth of it.

Before God and all the neighbors, this is going have to be one of those "plausibly period" projects. I have yet to find extant kaga-chochin because they probably didn't survive. I have yet to find iconographic support because I haven't found (or at least do not recall seeing) any night time scenes in any of the narrative picture scrolls from pre-1600 with paper or basket-lanterns in them. All I have is the oft-repeated blurb that paper lanterns evolved from the practice of using baskets as lanterns.

EDIT (added well after lunch): If you remember the PingMag article I posted the link to, it includes a photo of a kaga-chochin, consisting of a tall openwork basket with some paper glued to one side of it. I have absolutely no way of knowing how old it is or whether it's at all historically authentic.

It's not implausible.  The design idea I have in mind, assuming I can pull it all together and make it work, will at least be a functional, attractive and non-modern camp accessory.

Date: 2009-03-05 08:56 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] apollonia.livejournal.com
I am having the same issue re: 2 as I am doing a lot of research into period footbinding in China, and there are hardly any extant pieces that have survived.

Date: 2009-03-06 12:06 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] karisu-sama.livejournal.com
Given what I have seen of artistic Japanese basket weaving styles (including at a museum in Japan), I find it quite plausible. :)

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