2014. augusztus 26., kedd

Stroll in Japanese Gardens

The Suigō Sawara Aquatic Botanical Garden.




Visitors stroll in a flower garden covered by over 800,000 Shibazakura (芝桜, "lawn cherry blossom", pink moss or phlox moss in English) in full bloom during the Fuji Shibazakura Festival (富士芝桜まつり, Fuji Shibazakura Matsuri) at the foot of Mount Fuji in Fujikawaguchiko, Yamanashi Prefecture, on May 8, 2014. (Photo by Kazuhiro Nogi / AFP / Getty Images) — with Az-zahraa Za and Mai Plazo Olango.







Hida Folk Village (飛騨の里, Hida-no-sato) ~ Takayama City, Gifu Prefecture.
Hida Minzoku Mura (飛騨民俗村, Hida Folk Village) is an open air museum recreating Hida’s historical look (Hida is an old province located in the area of Gifu Prefecture). It features traditional houses and buildings which were dismantled at their original sites throughout the region and rebuilt here in 1971. The massive gasshō-zukuri (合掌造り) farmhouses, named after their steep thatched roofs which resemble a pair of hands joined in prayer ("gassho"), were moved from nearby Shirakawago. In folk art schools, you can make traditional Hida folk art. (Photo: djoser.nl)







"Zen & Blossom" ~ The garden of Kōdai-ji (高台寺), a temple of the Rinzai school of Zen Buddhism in Higashiyama-ku, Kyoto. (Photo by Yoshi Shimamura, 2012)





Kyoto



Tatton Park :






Japanese gardens (日本庭園 ) are traditional gardens that create miniature idealized landscapes, often in a highly abstract and stylized way.The gardens of the Emperors and nobles were designed for recreation and aesthetic pleasure, while the gardens of Buddhist temples were designed for contemplation and meditation.












Spring flowers on a hillside, Hokkaido :



2014. augusztus 25., hétfő

Cute Japanese Baby Dolls







Hinamatsuri Dolls




Also known as "Girls' Day", Hinamatsuri (literally Doll Festival) in Japan is a time to wish for the health and future happiness of young girls. During Hinamatsuri, most homes with young girls display hina dolls, decorate them with peach blossoms and offer the dolls special colored and diamond-shaped rice cakes, white sake and other items. In the hinamatsuri practice, originally dolls were used as substitutes to protect young girls from misfortunes and were washed away in the river with the perceived bad luck. That practice transformed into decorating dolls and spread throughout Japan in the Edo Period (1603-1868).



Japanese Samurai Doll :






Friendship Dolls: 




“Among the artworks are two of the Friendship Dolls sent to San Francisco as “goodwill ambassadors” from Japan in 1927. Nearly lifesize, these dolls make the ‘American Girl’ doll phenomenon look quite tame.”



Miss Mie, a Friendship Doll, from the Mie Prefecture in Japan and Her Accessories:




Miss Mie was among the 58 Torei Ningyo (Dolls of Gratitude) or Friendship Dolls that Japanese school children sent to the United States in 1927. Prior to their arrival, the Committee on World Friendship Among Children, founded by missionary Dr. Sidney Gulick, had sent 12,000 “blue-eyed” dolls to children in Japan. Each Torei Ningyo had a number of accessories including a passport, a steamship ticket, a wooden base with name plaque, lacquered clothing chests, shoes, two pedestal lanterns, a silk parasol, and many hand-written letters from Japanese children. Our museum is home for Miss Mie as well as all of her accessories and more than 150 friendship letters.

Public awareness about the Friendship Dolls increased during the 1980s and at least 44 dolls have been re-located throughout the United States. Four Torei Ningyo have returned to Japan for restoration and a homecoming tour. Miss Mie returned to the Mie Prefecture where she was given a “welcome home” celebration. She was then restored by the Yoshitoku Doll Company (founded in 1711) in Tokyo. Following her restoration, Miss Mie visited 12 cities within the Mie Prefecture during the spring of 2010 and then returned to Nebraska accompanied by Susan Curtis, collection assistant, and an entourage of our Japanese friends. Miss Mie’s arrival at the Museum was marked by a public celebration to honor a new and growing friendship with the citizens of the Mie Prefecture and the people of Japan.


Japanese vintage kimekomi doll of Lady in golden high hat, 1960's :



Lovely Japanese vintage doll represents young lady dressed in rich kimono and a courtier's gold hat ('eboshi'). She carries a pair of dip-buckets, painted with waves motif, on a yoke across her shoulders.
She performs a traditional dance of Shiokumi woman who carries seawater for the purpose of making salt and she dances to the memory of her poet lover and expresses her longing for him.
The doll made in kimekomi technique. 'Kimekomi' means "tuck in" in Japanese. The doll body is made of compacted paulownia sawdust mixed with glue. Clothes made of silk brocade with traditional Japanese design, and are glued and tucked into grooves of a doll body. Doll's face covered in a highly burnished gofun (crashed oyster shell) and hand-painted artistically and the wig is made of artificial hair.
Black lacquered wooden stand come with.
This lovely doll crafted about 1960's.


Japanese traditional doll :







Hina Matsuri Doll Stand :




The Japanese Tea Ceremony




The conventional Japanese tea garden designs are a picturesque landscape that has been formed into a tranquil and peaceful place where people can relax while enjoying nature. Japanese tea garden designs consists of two gardens, one that includes a waiting area where the guests will be called into the more formal, intimate, yet rustic structured inner garden. The outer design of the tea garden usually includes stepping stones leading to a cleansing area. The outer garden will provide an atmosphere of preparation, which includes the stepping stones, a lantern, and cleansing area in a very simplistic setting all designed to prepare for the tea ceremony inside. The inner tea garden is designed very simplistic and in a rustic, hut style structure. The atmosphere will be friendly and intimate. Here is where the tea ceremony is held. All is symbolic of the Buddhism belief of meditation and appreciation of the simplistic life cycle. The Japanese tea garden represents the virtues of Restraint, Politeness, Sensibility, and Modesty.





The tea ceremony (sado: "the way of the tea") is a ceremonial way of preparing and drinking tea. The custom has been strongly influenced by Zen Buddhism.
Nowadays, the tea ceremony is a relatively popular hobby. Many Japanese, who are interested in their own culture, take tea ceremony lessons. Tea ceremonies are held in traditional Japanese rooms in cultural community centres or private houses.

The ceremony itself consists of many rituals that have to be learned by heart. Almost each hand movement is prescribed. Basically, the tea is first prepared by the host, and then drunk by the guests. The tea is matcha green tea made of powdered tea leaves.




Tea Ceremony is a traditionally ritualized way of preparing,serving,and drinking green tea.The custom of tea drinking introduced from China,began in the 9th century.Later it gradually spread among the common people, and today,there are many tea ceremony schools.Tea parties are held mainly in a chashitsu (special tea ceremony room),but it is also held in the open air such as in temple garden. In tea ceremony,great emphasis is placed on spiritual tranquility and simplicity of taste.To establish these elements,tea ceremony etiquette is of great importance.





The Japanese Tea Ceremony

The tea ceremony is also known as sado “ The way of the tea” is a ceremonial way
of preparing and drinking tea. It was influenced by Zen Buddhism. The tea
ceremony today is a relatively popular hobby. Many Japanese, who are
interested in their own culture, take tea ceremony lessons. Tea ceremonies
are held in traditional Japanese rooms in cultural community centres or
private houses. The ceremony itself has many steps that have to be learned
by heart. The tea is first prepared by the host, and then drunk by the guests. The tea is matcha green tea made of powdered tea leaves.

The Procedure of the Japanese Tea ceremony
Bow when you receive the cup of tea which is called a chawan.

 Take the chawan with your right hand and place it in the palm of your left hand.

 Turn the chawan clockwise three times before you take a drink.

 When the tea is gone, make a loud slurp to tell the host that the tea was truly
enjoyed.

 Wipe the part of the chawan your lips touched with your right hand.

 Turn the chawan counter clockwise and return to the host.



What else is served and other rituals?

Guests gather at an appointed time to be served food and drink. This can be an informal  tea which consists of serving a sweet and some tea, or even a small meal with the sweet and tea. This is called a chakai and can take anywhere from 20 minutes to an hour or so. The number of guests for this sort of tea can be as small as one, and the highest number of guests is determined only by the limitations of the host's facilities. Guests also can be invited to a much more formal
gathering called a chaji which involves highly structured gathering rituals, the serving of a meal in multiple courses, an intermission in a garden, and then a solemn thick tea ceremony followed by the less solemn thin Japanese tea ceremony.





The Japanese tea ceremony is a ritualized way of preparing and drinking tea which was perfected in the latter half of the 18th century by Sen-no-Rikyu. It was inspired by Zen and continues to reflect the Zen ideals of aestheticism, peace, harmony and discipline. Today it is still a popular pastime, and for many it is a welcome respite from the hustle and bustle of busy modern-day life.

During the Kamakura period, many Japanese priests and scholars traveled to China to study the high level of culture which typified the Southern Sung Dynasty (1126-1278). Among these priests was Eisai, who after returning to Japan in 1191, established the Zen sect of Buddhism and brought with him tea seeds and the custom of ritualistic tea preparation. In 1214, he presented his book, Kissa Yojoki (The Health benefits of Drinking Tea) to the Shogun Minamoto Sanetomo in which he states, "Tea is a medicine which cures diseases and promotes long life." Eisai is also credited with introducing the method of making tea by drying and grinding the young leaves into a fine powder. This type of tea, called matcha is the tea used in the tea ceremony today.

It is believed that Eisai's close friend Myo-e planted the first tea seeds brought back to Japan by Eisai and made the cultivation of tea shrubs part of his spiritual regiment. Myo-e planted tea shrubs throughout the Kyoto countryside and the demand for tea grew.

When the Kamakura shogunate fell in 1333, civil wars began in which northern and southern clans fought for control of the government. A new class of nobles emerged whose extravagant tastes turned the tea ceremony into a pretentious affair which was executed in grand banquet style. Great tea parties were held in which guests were invited to sample a wide variety of teas and guess their origin.

Later under the Ashikaga clan of the Muromachi period (1573-1603), Zen Buddhism and the tea ceremony flourished. The Zen priest Murata Shukou (1422-1502), called the father of the tea ceremony, is credited with uniting tea and spirituality and introducing it to the common people. Shukou, believing that a small intimate environment was more consistent with the Zen spirit of the tea ceremony, began designing tea rooms (sukiya) which were 4 ½ tatami mats in size (app. 9 square yards) and accommodated up to five people. Also, unlike earlier tea masters, Shukou began the custom of serving tea to guests himself. He emphasized the spiritual aspect of the tea ceremony stressing three basic rules. The first states that purity of mind should be observed at all times; the second that consideration and self-control between host and guests should always be maintained and the third, that persons of lower social status should be given the same respect as those of higher social status.

While Shukou is credited with being the father of the tea ceremony, Sen-no-Rikyu (1522-1591) is credited with perfecting "the way of tea" or shado. Not only did he become Japan's best known tea master but he was also accomplished in the arts of flower arrangement and poetry writing– both disciplines complimentary to the art of tea. Traditionally, the utensils used in the tea ceremony and the artwork decorating the tea room walls were expensive Chinese pieces. It was through the vision of Sen-no-Rikyu that simple utensils were not only accepted as appropriate but embraced. His own tea-room was a simply adorned thatched hut where he invited people of every social station. Sen-no-Rikyu is responsible for synthesizing aspects of daily life with the highest spiritual ideals and wrote prolifically on the subject.

Chanoyu (the Way of Tea) represents the quintessence of Japanese culture and Zen philosophy. By participating in a tea ceremony, or visiting a temple closely associated with the tea ceremony, you'll become acquainted with the spirit of Japan. Our guide is Sen Sooku, hereditary successor to the Mushakoji Senke Tea School and direct descendent of the founding Grand Master, Sen-no-Rikyu.

An authentic tea ceremony takes place in a tearoom where a hanging scroll and arranged flowers adorn an alcove; tea utensils are waiting. But Sen Sooku says, "You can call any gathering a tea ceremony as long as there are guests and Matcha." Matcha is a powdered form of green tea leaves ground by a millstone. Hot water is added to the powdered tea in a vessel and whisked rapidly. It is rich in vitamin C and minerals. Matcha is made from the choicest hand-picked leaves, carefully ground into extremely fine powder. Since only 45 grams of powdered tea can be made with a millstone in an hour, it's truly an extravagant drink. The tea leaves are actually imbibed, and the insoluble ingredients are absorbed by the body.





The exchange between host and guests is one of the pleasures of the ceremony. When serving, the host prepares each bowl of matcha with great care, taking into consideration the preferences and physical conditions of the guests. For example, if a guest is perspiring and looks thirsty, a host will make the matcha slightly weaker and in larger quantity. Tea bowls are carefully selected. Different from other types of tea, the way of serving matcha is the origin of counter-style service at a bar or other culinary establishment. It is indeed a highly customized and personalized form of service.

A trip to Japan would not be complete without experiencing the Japanese tea ceremony, or cha-no-yu.  The tea ceremony has developed into a ritual seeking to combine the four qualities of respect, harmony, cleanliness, and tranquility.
The steps to the ceremony are quite simple:  clean the serving bowls, boil a pot of water, serve a sweet treat to guests before the tea, mix powdered green tea (Matcha) and water to make a frothy tea, serve the tea to guests. [ The flavors of the sweets and bitter tea compliment each other.   This is a sign of harmony.





List of Japanese Tea Ceremony Utensils





1. Tea caddy
2.  Bamboo whisk
3.  Tea Bowl
4.  Tea cloth
5.  Tea Scoop
6.  Waste Water container
7.  Tray
8.  Paper napkin
9.  Japanese confectionery
10. Matcha

Tea equipment is called dōgu (道literally tools). A wide range of dōgu is necessary for even the most basic tea ceremony. A full list of all available tea implements and supplies and their various styles and variations could fill a several-hundred-page book, and thousands of such volumes exist. The following is a brief list of the essential components:

* Chakin. The "chakin" is a rectangular, white, linen or hemp cloth used to ritually cleanse the tea bowl. Different styles of "chakin" are used for thick and thin tea.

* Fukusa. The fukusa is a square silk cloth used for the ritual cleansing of the tea scoop and the tea caddy, and to handle a hot kettle or pot lid. Fukusa are sometimes used by guests to protect the tea implements whilst examining them (though usually these fukusa are a special style called kobukusa or "old fukusa." Some traditions prefer to call it dashibukusa or "fukusa for serving". They are thicker, brocaded and patterned, and often more brightly coloured than regular fukusa. Kobukusa are kept in the kaishi wallet or in the breast of the kimono). When not in use, the fukusa is tucked into the obi, or belt of the kimono. Fukusa are most often monochromatic and unpatterned, but variations exist. There are different colours for men (usually purple) and women (orange, red), for people of different ages or skill levels, for different ceremonies and for different schools. Some schools, including the Urasenke, prefer to introduce variants with brocades or patterns, while some prefer to use simpler ones. The size and way of making fukusa was purportedly established by the Rikyu's second wife, who was also an expert of this way.

* Ladle (hishaku). This is a long bamboo ladle with a nodule in the approximate center of the handle. It is used to transfer water to and from the iron pot and the fresh water container in certain ceremonies. Different styles are used for different ceremonies and in different seasons. A larger version is used for the ritual purification undergone by guests before entering the tea room.

* Tana. Tana, literally "shelves," is a general word that refers to all types of wooden or bamboo furniture used in tea preparation; each type of tana has its own name. Tana vary considerably in size, style, features and materials. They are placed in front of the host in the tea room, and various tea implements are placed on, or stored in, them. They are used in a variety of ways during different tea ceremonies.

Two modern "thin tea" bowls

* Tea bowl (chawan). Tea bowls are available in a wide range of sizes and styles, and different styles are used for thick and thin tea (see Tea ceremony, below). Shallow bowls, which allow the tea to cool rapidly, are used in summer; deep bowls are used in winter. Bowls are frequently named by their creators or owners, or by a tea master. Bowls over four hundred years old are said to be in use today, but probably only on unusually special occasions. The best bowls are thrown by hand, and some bowls are extremely valuable. Irregularities and imperfections are prized: they are often featured prominently as the "front" of the bowl. Broken tea bowls are painstakingly repaired using a mixture of lacquer and other natural ingredients. Powdered gold is added to disguise the dark colour of the lacquer, so this repairment is often referred as kintsugi or "joint with gold", and additional designs are sometimes created with the mixture. Bowls repaired in this fashion are used mainly in November, when tea practitioners begin using the ro, or hearth, again, as an expression and celebration of the concept of wabi, or humble simplicity.

A typical lacquerware natsume

* Tea caddy (cha-ire and natsume). Tea caddies come in two basic styles, the natsume and the cha-ire, though there is variation in shape, size and colour within the styles. The cha-ire is usually tall and thin (but shapes may vary significantly) and has an ivory lid with a gold leaf underside. Cha-ire are usually ceramic, and are stored in decorative bags called shifuku. The natsume is named for its resemblance to the natsume fruit (the jujube). It is short with a flat lid and rounded bottom, and is usually made of lacquered or untreated wood. Cha-ire and natsume are used in different ceremonies; normally cha-ire is used for containing koi-cha, and natsume for usucha.

* Tea scoop (chashaku). Tea scoops are carved from a single piece of bamboo or ivory. Sometimes, it is made of the tree of Japanese apricot, pine, or cherry blossom. Bamboo tea scoop in the most casual style is with a nodule in the approximate center. They are used to scoop tea from the tea caddy into the tea bowl. Larger scoops are used to transfer tea into the tea caddy in the mizuya (preparation area), but these are not seen by guests. Different styles and colours are used in various tea traditions.

* Whisk (chasen). Tea whisks are carved from a single piece of bamboo. There are thick and thin whisks for thick and thin tea. Though they are a necessary part to serve tea, whisks themselves aren't considered as dōgu. Old and damaged whisks are not simply discarded. Once a year around May, they are taken to local temples and ritually burned in a simple ceremony called chasen kuyō, which reflects the reverence with which objects are treated in the tea ceremony. This custom itself doesn't belong to the tea ceremony though, but because of the close relationship between the tea ceremony and traditional religions, this kind of delicacy in the treatment of discarded things is esteemed in general.

In addition to the above, the core set of dōgu include mizusashi, kama, futaoki and tools for coal treatment (sumi demae).

All the tools for tea ceremony are handled with exquisite care. They are scrupulously cleaned before and after each use and before storing. Some components are handled only with gloved hands.



2014. augusztus 24., vasárnap

Japanese traditional clothing

Kimono and yukata are considered as Japanese traditional clothes 



Prince Hisahito, wears a traditional robe, featuring images of a crane, which is a symbol of longevity, honor and loyalty in Japan ( Photo: © Rex )


Traditional Japanese family! Kawaii




Nagoya, which exhibits armor, swords, tea utensils, artwork and household items; and the Maeda and Honda Museums in Kanazawa, which display relics of the two most prominent samurai families in the region.



Kimono and yukata are considered as Japanese traditional clothes












Japan Art and Architecture - The Golden Pavilion (Kinkakuji)

Kinkaku-ji (Temple of the Golden Pavilion), officially named Rokuon-ji (Deer Garden Temple), is a Zen Buddhist temple in Kyoto, Japan



Content / Editor: Navid Fatehpour









Golden Pavilion Kyoto Japan: The Golden Pavilion (Kinkakuji) is literally covered in gold - gold leaf. The Golden Pavilion is World Heritage listed and surround by beautiful gardens.











Golden Pavilion is the popular name for one of the main buildings of a Buddhist Japanese temple in Kyoto Japan. The name Golden Pavilion comes from the Japanese term Kinkakuji, which literally means the temple of the Golden Pavilion(金閣寺). Rokuon-ji (鹿苑寺 Deer Garden Temple) is the formal name of the temple complex in which the Golden Pavilion is found.














Golden Pavilion - History



In the 1220's it was the comfortable villa of Kintsune Saionji. Yoshimitsu, the 3rd Shogun of Ashikaga, abdicated the throne in 1394. After three years, he began to build Kitayamaden and he made a special effort to make it a breath-taking site. He indulged in his peaceful life in this serene setting. After Yoshimitsu's death, Kitayamaden was made into a Zen temple in accordance with his will. All the buildings of those days came to ruin except Kinkaku. The garden, however, remains as it was in former days and can be enjoyed as it was hundreds of years ago. Kinkaku-ji Temple was inscribed as World Cultural Heritage in 1994.















Golden Pavilion - Building







Kinkaku-ji was formally called Shariden. The elegant, harmonious building consists of three types of architecture. The 1st floor is Shinden-zukuri, the palace style. It is named Ho-sui-in. The 2nd floor is Buke-zukuri, the style of the samurai house and is called Cho-on-do. The 3rd floor is Karayo style or Zen temple style. It is called Kukkyo-cho.



Both the 2nd and 3rd floors are covered with gold-leaf on Japanese lacquer. The roof, upon which the Chinese phoenix settles, is thatched with shingles.



Recently, the coating of Japanese lacquer was found a little decayed and a new coating as well as gilding with gold-leaf, much thicker than the original ones, was given to the building and was completed in 1987. Furthermore, the beautiful painting on the ceiling and the statue of Yoshimitsu were restored, with utmost care, to their original splendour.





2014. augusztus 23., szombat

Look! The Undisputed Queen of Karate Kata - Rika Usami

Look! The Undisputed Queen of Karate Kata







That girl is Rika Usami.



She is in the best form of exercise - even for men also adept carry them out. The multiple champion lady now presents a form of exercise that many people have not done it perfectly.







Kata (forms) Kata are a cultural phenomenon of human movement acting as a catalog of individual "waza" (technique), linked together into geometrical routines forming a specific reference work that preserves the art and bears the imprint of those who passed down the art to succeeding generations. In spite of using nearly fifty empty-hand routines, there are seventeen principal kata practiced in Koryu Uchinadi Kenpo-jutsu today.






Atami Plum Blossom Festival 2014

~ Atami City, Shizuoka Prefecture, January 11 - March 9, 2014.









The 70th Atami Plum Blossom Festival (熱海梅園梅まつり, Atami Baien Ume Matsuri) is now being held at Atami Bai-en Koen (梅園公園, plum tree park), a popular viewing spot for the earliest plums in Japan since it was opened. Built in 1886 by Mogi Sobeh, a wealthy merchant from Yokohama. It is the site of 454 trees of 60 species including a ancient plum tree more than 100 years old.





A Cultural Dictionary of Japan

A Cultural Dictionary of Japan


Postcard ~ Pictorial Map of Japan: Festivals (日本の祭)
Image: Daniel Zhao, a vagabond currently living in Troy, NY, USA. She’s a student with a passion for postcards and she loves photography and travel.







Shiretoko Hiraki (知床開き), Summer coming festival ~ Rausu Town, Hokkaido Prefecture, June 21-22, 2014.
This festival is a celebration to pray for safety at sea and which heralds the beginning of the late Shiretoko summer. There are all kinds of events, including a fireworks display, a dance parade, tug of war and more. (Image: rausu-town.jp)







Yamanashi Gion Matsuri (山梨祇園祭り), summer festival ~ Fukuroi City, Shizuoka Prefecture, July 11-13, 2014.
Gion Matsuri is an event originated in Gion, Kyoto as part of a purification ritual (goryo-e) to quieten down evil spirits that cause disease and disaster. In 970, it was decreed an annual event. In the Heian period (794–1185) goryō were considered to be spirits of nobility who had died as a result of political intrigue and who, because of their ill will for the living, brought about natural disasters, diseases, and wars. The Gion Matsuri became a model for a large number of festivals around the country. The festival features, among others, the elaborately decorated floats "yama" and giant "hoko", which are pulled through the city, accompanied by drum and flute music by the people sitting on the floats. Yama, the smaller floats, depict scenes from Japanese history and mythology and often bear pine trees, shrines, and mannequins. The hoko are massive 2-storied floats, that are hauled by teams of up to 50 men. (Image: naka-se.com, 2011)






Yamaboko Junko, the main procession of Gion Matsuri (祇園祭) ~ Kyoto City, July 17, 2014.
The highlight of the Gion Matsuri is "Yamaboko Junko" (山鉾巡行), the grand procession of floats held on the 17th. A three kilometer long route along Shijo, Kawaramachi and Oike streets, starting from Shijo-Karasuma at 9.00 am. The word Yamaboko refers to the two types of massive floats used in the procession: the 23 "smaller" yama and 10 massive hoko, accompanied by music. The first float is Naginata Hoko (長刀鉾). The order of the floats is decided by drawing lots, however the Naginata Hoko float has been privileged to head the procession. The festival still uses the practice of selecting a local boy to be a divine messenger (稚児, chigo). The Hoko are the larger two-story floats in the procession. They are so big they need to be pulled by large groups of men (15 - 50). The procession on July 17 features 23 yama and hoko, while the procession on July 24 features the remaining 10 floats. (Photo by Celialee, 2007)





Sanja Matsuri (三社祭 / 浅草神社例大祭, Senso-ji annual grand festival) ~ Taito-ku, Tokyo, held on the third weekend of every May at Asakusa Shrine.
The festivities begin on Friday with the Daigyōretsu (大行列, "large parade"), a large procession of priests, city officials, geisha, musicians and dancers wearing Edo Period costumes (Photo by Tokyobling)