File:JapanHomes111 STRAIGHTENING SHŌJI-FRAME.jpg

JapanHomes111_STRAIGHTENING_SHŌJI-FRAME.jpg(397 × 259 pixels, file size: 22 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg)

Summary

Description
English: From original book: "The outside screens, or shōji, which take the place of our windows, are those screens which border the verandah, or come on that side of the room towards the exterior wall of the house. These consist of a light frame-work made of thin bars of wood crossing and matched into each other, leaving small rectangular interspaces. The lower portion of the shōji, to the height of a foot from the floor, is usually a wood-panel, as a protection against careless feet as well as to strengthen the frame. The shōji are covered on the outside with white paper. The only light the room receives when the shōji are closed comes through this paper, and the room is flooded with a soft diffused light which is very agreeable. The hikite for pushing the shōji back is arranged by one of the rectangular spaces being papered on the opposite side, thus leaving a convenient recess for the fingers. Sometimes little holes or rents are accidentally made in this paper covering of the shōji; and in the mending of these places the Japanese, ever true in their artistic feeling, repair the damage, not by square bits of paper as we should probably, but by cutting out pretty designs of cherry or plum blossoms and patching the rents with these. When observing this artistic device I have often wondered how the broken panes of some of our country houses must look to a Japanese, — the repairs being effected by the use of dirty bags stuffed with straw, or more commonly by battered hats jammed into the gaps. Sometimes the frame of a shōji gets sprung or thrown out of its true rectangular shape; this is remedied by inserting at intervals in the meshes of the frame-work elastic strips of bamboo, and the constant pressure of these strips in one direction tends to bring the frame straight again. Fig. 111 illustrates the appearance of this; the curved lines representing the elastic strips."
Date
Source https://www.kellscraft.com/JapaneseHomes/JapaneseHomesCh03.html
Author
Edward S. Morse  (1838–1925)  wikidata:Q2519303 s:en:Author:Edward Sylvester Morse
 
Edward S. Morse
Alternative names
Edward Sylvester Morse; E. S. Morse
Description American anthropologist, art historian, zoologist, malacologist, archaeologist and curator
Date of birth/death 18 June 1838 Edit this at Wikidata 20 December 1925 Edit this at Wikidata
Location of birth/death Portland Salem
Authority file
creator QS:P170,Q2519303

Licensing

Public domain
This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published (or registered with the U.S. Copyright Office) before January 1, 1929.

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Note: This tag should not be used for sound recordings.PD-1923Public domain in the United States//commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:JapanHomes111_STRAIGHTENING_SH%C5%8CJI-FRAME.jpg

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current01:06, 7 February 2020Thumbnail for version as of 01:06, 7 February 2020397 × 259 (22 KB)HLHJUser created page with UploadWizard
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