Kokontozai: KASHIYUKA’s Shop of Japanese Arts and Crafts /[LANTERN]
『カーサ ブルータス』2021年6月号より
June 8, 2021 | Design | KASHIYUKA’s Shop of Japanese Arts and Crafts | photo_Keisuke Fukamizu hair & make-up_Masako Osuga editor_Masae Wako translation_ Mika Yoshida & David G. Imber
Searching all of Japan for handcrafted items that express its heart and soul, our proprietor, KASHIYUKA, presents things that bring a bit of luxury to everyday life. This was her encounter with a lantern made of washi paper, produced in an area once known as “Iyo no Kuni” in Ehime prefecture. This beautiful “supporting actor”, as it’s thought of, has had a role in seasonal festivals, adorning procession floats and shrines for as far back as two centuries.
The Saijo matsuri (festival) is held every October in various parts of the city of Saijo, Ehime prefecture.Among the festivities, more than 80 altars, hung with nearly 100 lanterns are dedicated to the spirits at the Isono shrine. The lanterns are made by Iyo Chōchin Kōbō, the Iyo Paper Lantern Factory. “They’re round and sweet,” exclaimed our shopkeeper KASHIYUKA.
I love Japanese traditional festivals. We all join at the same place, same time, against the same backdrop, and share a very special kind of good will and enthusiasm. The special attire and ornamentation just add to the fun, if you know what I mean.
Purchase No. 38【Iyo Lantern】“Supporting actors” giving color to the Iyo seasonal festivals — hand-painted, hand-pasted paper lanterns.
The Iyo Chōchin I encountered in Saijo, Ehime, is one such adornment. It’s a gorgeous, handcrafted object that’s played a supporting role in the Saijo matsuri since the Edo period.
Wooden frames for the Saijo festival lanterns. The lanterns use candles, and the round shape prevents them from catching fire.
“In mid-October elaborate portable religious arks and special yatai (floats) are constructed, dedicated to the various shrines for the Saijo matsuri. Our town’s floats have always featured as many as 100 washi-covered chōchin holding burning candles. Sometimes there are more than 130 of these, and so you’d see about 13,000 paper lanterns overall, illuminated from within,” says Mr. Toru Hino of Iyo Chōchin Kōbō, adding his opinion that the number and beauty of these displays represent the best in Japan. Mr. Hino had a career as an engineer in Tokyo, but so loved his hometown’s Saijo matsuri that he returned there at age 46 to become a lantern artisan.