Tea utensils, tea ceremony tools, matcha tea bowl, moon viewing, silver glaze, thin rabbit, made by Kaiho Yagi

Hello, this is Imaya Shizukaen.
Today we will be introducing the Matcha Tea Bowl "Thin Rabbit" made by Yagi Kaiho.
Please take a look.
Harvest Moon (the 15th night of the month/Moon viewing)
It means "the moon that rises in the middle of autumn".
So when is the "middle of autumn"?
This means that the middle of autumn is August, and the harvest moon occurs in the middle of August, around the 15th.
Since the current Gregorian calendar is one to two months behind the lunar calendar, the fifteenth night of the full moon is considered to be "the day when the full moon appears between September 7th and October 8th."

Moon viewing customs and offerings
Although it seems to vary depending on the region, it is customary to make offerings during the moon viewing festival.
Each offering has a meaning. Here are some of them.

・Japanese silver grass
One of the seven autumn herbs.
They began offering the flowers as offerings because the white pampas grass resembles ears of rice and is believed to ward off evil spirits.
・Moon viewing dumplings
The round dumplings are likened to the moon and are said to express gratitude.
On the fifteenth night of the lunar month, there are 15 dumplings, which are piled up like a pyramid and offered.
This is because the topmost dumpling was thought to be a bridge to the spirit world.
・Crops
They offered freshly harvested crops such as taro, chestnuts, and edamame to give thanks for the good harvest.
It is particularly common to offer taro as an offering, and the Mid-Autumn Moon is also known as the Taro Moon.

Customs
Not only offerings, but unique customs are also passed down in each region.
The most common is the "moon viewing thief."
This means that you can freely take offerings only during the moon viewing festival.
Example: In some parts of Nagasaki Prefecture, it is called "Mandakana" and children are free to take the offerings.
In Senboku District, Akita Prefecture, this is called "kataashi gomen," and it is apparently permissible to step into someone else's house with one foot and take an offering.
Both of them take this to mean that the moon has eaten the offering and are happy.

[Yagi Kaiho]
Born in 1950 in Yamashiro-cho, Kyoto Prefecture
1961 (Showa 41) Completed Kyoto Prefectural Potter Vocational Training Institute
Studied under the first generation Kato Josui
Since then, he has won numerous awards at department store 6 and public exhibitions.

Size: Approx. diameter 11.8 x height 7.7 cm
Author: Kaiho Yagi
Box Wooden box
Here are some tools for moon viewing → Please click to view.

Various summer tools are here → Please click to view.

Click here for various tools for moon viewing → Please click to view.

Imaya Imaya Imaya Tea Ceremony Japanese Tea / Tea Ceremony Utensils Imaya Seikoen / Imaya Seikoen Limited Partnership / Imaya Seikoen / imaya

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Product code: tyawann-948
[Tea utensils/tea ceremony tools Matcha tea bowl Moon viewing] Silver glaze Thin rabbit Made by Kaiho Yagi
Awn, silver grass, Japanese silver grass, the full moon, moon viewing, mid-autumn festival, rabbit, hare, bunny

Related Categories:
Seasonal Tea Ceremony Utensils > Autumn (September 14th, Moon Viewing)
Tea ceremony utensils
Tea ceremony tools > Japanese tea bowl (colored painting)
Tea ceremony tools > Japanese tea bowls (colored painting) > Autumn
Sales price: ¥7,040

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