Amy Sylvester Katoh

Japan Country Living


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      A rare sight today, a solitary thatched farmhouse, Miyama-cho, Kyoto Prefecture.

       Cotton indigo tie-dyed ( shibori ) crepe work jacket in a field of newly harvested rice.

      Circular rice field dedicated to the gods of the grain; outdoor folk museum, Takayama, Gifu Prefecture.

      Persimmons drying against an old house, Noto Reninsula.

      JAPAN COUNTRY LIVING

      SPIRIT * TRADITION * STYLE

      AMY SYLVESTER KATOH

      PRINCIPAL PHOTOGRAPHY BY SH IN KIMURA

      TUTTLE PUBLISHING

       Boston • Rutland, Vermont • Tokyo

      ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

      For my family: to Yuichi, who first started me on this journey, to Mia and Saya, Tai and Toshi, who are always beside me. And for Toshiko and Sueko, who light the way. This book would have been impossible without the kindness and cooperation of countless people. Heartfelt thanks to the Akagi family, Mr. and Mrs. Akiyama, J.C. Brown, Diane Durston, Koji Fujibayashi of Sanso Murata, Kozo Fujita, Hiroko Izumi Fukuchi, Mr. and Mrs. Hagiwara, Mr. and Mrs. Hagiya, the Hiroji Hashimoto family, the Junji Hata family, IDr. Hide lshiguro, Senzo Ishikawa, Koji Kado, Kame no Ii, Yoshihiro Kamitani, the Hiromi Kanemaru family, the Kawasaki family, Yufuin, Kyushu, Marc Keane, Miwako Kimura, Ryoichi Kinoshita, Nanyen Kitamuro, Yuri Konomi, Hiroshi Kurata, Hiroshi Kutsukake, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Large, Kiyoko Machida,.Mitsu Minowa, Akio Mitsuno, Daisuke Miyashita, Mr. and Mrs: Miyatani, Sachi Molwi, Mr. and Mrs. Mori, Mr. and Mrs. Tadashi Morita, the Murata family, Makoto Nakano, Takashi Nakazato, the Nibe family, Takako Nishikawa, Margaret Price, Shinji Sakamoto and mother, Shinsaburo Shibuya, Nobuyoshi Shimomura, Mr. and Mrs. Hiroyuki Shipdo, Masanosuke Shirawaka, Barbara Stephan, Shinji Takagi, Yoichi Takimoto, Kenji Tsuehisawa, Mr. and Mrs. Uchida, Mr. and Mrs. Masao Umesao, Douglas and Kiyo Woodruff, Akemitsu Yamada, Mr. and Mrs. Yanagida, and Kazuko Yoshiura.

      Photos pp. 50-51 & 54 © Akira Kita Photos pp. 14-15, 38-39, 145 © Naoki Baba.

      Published by Tuttle Publishing, an imprint of Periplus Editions (HK) Ltd.

      Copyright© 1993 by Charles E. Tuttle Co., Inc.

       All rights reserved

      LCC Card No. 93-60522

       ISBN: 978-1-4629-0649-9 (ebook)

      First published, 1993

       Printed in Singapore

      Designed by Katharine Markulin Hama

      Distributed by:

      North America, Latin America & Europe

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      CONTENTS

      Introduction 18

      Heritage 23

      Country Ways 37

      The Art of Everyday 109

      The Indigo Tradition 161

      Sources 190

      INTRODUCTION

      THE ROAD THROUGH

       THE COUNTRY

      On first impression, Japan was a jumble of colors, shapes, sounds, smells and people. Patches of brilliant green rice fields bordered by sluices of running water, layers of indigo mountains, explosions of scarlet spider lilies at the edges of the fields, and people in blue-and-white work clothes, planting, pruning, picking. Here and there a wooden shrine or a stone statue, graced perhaps with a red bib and a fresh offering of flowers, a rope of twisted straw, several coins. Farmhouse roofs were thatched-thick bonnets of golden reeds that turned brown, then gray. Sculpted, organic toppings, the roofs looked as though they had been poured over the house.

      In the myths, the islands of Japan are said to have been created of drops falling from the spear of the founding god as it was drawn from the ocean. Standing on the hills, overlooking the misty folds of the land, the myth