Postcard Japanese Tradition Geisha Girls Meiji Era Kimono Hand-Tinted Photograph

$ 340.24

Theme: Art, Countries, Cultures & Ethnicities, Domestic & Family Life, Fashion, Historical Figures, Patriotic, People, Social History Time Period Manufactured: 1900-1919 Era: Pre-War (Pre-1914) Material: Paper Signed: No Size: (141 x 90 mm) Signed By: Unsigned Type: Printed (Lithograph) Artist: Unknown Unit of Sale: Single Unit Personalise: No Country of Origin: Japan Subject: Anonymous People Postage Condition: Posted Number of Items in Set: 1 Occasion: Fourth of July Features: Hand Colored Print Year Manufactured: 1910 Featured Person: Geisha Original/Licensed Reprint: Original Brand/Publisher: Unbranded

Description

Postcard Japanese Tradition Geisha Girls Meiji Era Kimono Hand-Tinted Photograph Two Japanese Meiji Era geisha girls Tea time / tea ceremony, c. 1910. Posted Good vintage condition. Some damage to all of the edges. All corners slightly bent. Dirt spots, discoloration, creasing, scratches, missing paint and stains marks may be visible on single or both sides of the postcard. Good condition for its age. Please look at the photos for condition details. Details: Japan - Two Japanese girls in traditional costume reading a picture book. 【141 x 90 mm.】 thought to be from late Meiji Period (1890-1912). unposted. used. hand writing at the back. overall feeling of use and aging, browning, stains or other small damage. see photos for details “Tsugane San came in shortly and seated herself upon a square cushion on the opposite side of the hibachi. She pulled the tea tray towards her and taking the tall blue cup poured a little hot water in it and replaced it on the tray. “Opening an air tight canister which had a lid with a rim quite half as deep as the canister’s entire height she took out two pinches of tea dried leaves of a deep dull green that had never suffered from other heat or chemical process than the sun’s rays effect. The two pinches went into the kibisho, or small porcelain teapot. Next she poured boiling water from the tetsubin – the iron tea kettle – into a sort of gravy boat where it must cool a bit lest it make the brew astringent. “Replacing the tea kettle on the brazier she turned the moderated boiling water on the leaves, let it stand perhaps a minute, and pouring a tiny cup half full for Kato San – her cup full for herself – drank the sherry colored liquor slowly with a sound somewhere between a kiss and a sigh.” – The Heart of Japan: Glimpses of Life and Nature Far from the Travellers Track in the Land of the Rising Sun, by Clarence Ludlow Brownell, 1903 Keywords: Old Japanese Postcard Meiji Period (1890-1912) Beautiful Women Kimono Geisha Tea Tea Ceremony Hand-Tinted

  1. EXCELLENT QUALITY CARD AND EXCELLENT PACKAGING! HIGHLY RECOMMENDED SELLER.

    Ajay Bhat28c
  2. Superbly packed and arrived quickly. Great ebaying loop

    Radix70fc043
  3. As described. Well packaged. Good seller.

    Grimm5d2b7d3