Traditionelle Handwerke

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Elderly lacquerware artisans in trailer workshops amid temporary housing on Noto Peninsula, two years after the earthquake, highlighting recovery struggles.
Bild generiert von KI

Noto peninsula earthquake marks second anniversary amid ongoing challenges

Von KI berichtet Bild generiert von KI

Two years after the January 1, 2024, Noto Peninsula Earthquake, which caused 698 deaths across three prefectures, about 18,000 people remain in temporary housing in Ishikawa Prefecture. While infrastructure restoration progresses, challenges like population outflow and aging hinder full recovery. In Wajima, production of traditional lacquerware continues in trailer houses.

A media preview in Gifu City illuminated nearly 100 traditional umbrellas on Friday, ahead of the event's official start the next day. Projection mapping displayed flower images on the ground, highlighting one of the city's crafts. The evening event begins Saturday at Gifu Park and runs through February 1.

Von KI berichtet

In Kyoto, 27-year-old Kengo Banba is revitalizing his family's 150-year-old dyeing workshop by adapting the prestigious kuro-zome black dyeing technique to Western clothing. Facing near closure due to his grandfather's illness, his mother took over the business, and now Banba continues the legacy with a pursuit of a shade 'blacker than black'.

Donnerstag, 08. Januar 2026, 02:59 Uhr

Traditional kote-e artwork cleaned at Toyama museum

Freitag, 02. Januar 2026, 01:18 Uhr

Noto's suzu ware reemerges from earthquake rubble

Donnerstag, 11. Dezember 2025, 07:07 Uhr

Six Japanese items added to UNESCO intangible heritage list

Samstag, 15. November 2025, 12:52 Uhr

Veranstaltung im Kyoto State Guest House präsentiert traditionelles Japan

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