Ishikawa Students Make Commemorative Wajima Lacquerware; Continuing Traditions After Noto Peninsula Earthquake
7:00 JST, December 16, 2024
WAJIMA, Ishikawa – Sixth-grade students in Wajima, Ishikawa Prefecture, which was hit by the Noto Peninsula Earthquake, have started making panels decorated with Wajima’s traditional chinkin gold-inlaid lacquerware technique to commemorate their upcoming graduation.
Chinkin is a technique in which gold leaf or gold powder is used to fill in patterns which have been carved into lacquerware.
A similar event is held every year, and a total of 90 students from nine primary schools are working on the panels this year at a temporary school building in Kawaimachi, which houses six primary schools affected by the disaster.
The students started working earlier this month. Students from Kawai and Oya primary schools carved designs like Mt. Fuji and maneki neko beckoning cats on lacquered panels. When a craftsman embeds gold powder into the patterns and polishes the surface of the lacquerware, the gold gilded designs truly stand out on the panels.
"Society" POPULAR ARTICLE
-
Record 320 School Staff Punished for Sex Offenses in Japan
-
New Year’s Ceremony Held at Imperial Palace (UPDATE 1)
-
Central Tokyo Observes 1st Snow of Season; 25 Days Earlier than Last Winter
-
Risk of Nuclear Weapons Being Used Greater Than Ever; Support Growing in Russia As Ukraine War Continues
-
Overtourism Grows as Snow Cap Appears on Mt. Fuji; Local Municipalities Hard Pressed to Establish Countermeasures
JN ACCESS RANKING
- New Energy Plan Reflects Fear of Reduced Competitiveness; Japan Concerned About Exclusion From Supply Chains
- Prehistoric Stone Tool Cut Out of Coral Reef and Taken Away in Kyushu island; Artifact was Believed to Have Been Dropped in Sea During Prehistoric Jomon Period
- Record 320 School Staff Punished for Sex Offenses in Japan
- New Year’s Ceremony Held at Imperial Palace (UPDATE 1)
- Immerse Yourself in Snoopy’s World Ahead of Comic Strip’s 75th Anniversary Next Year; Renovated, Refreshed Museum Features Original, Reproduced Comic Strips, Vintage Merchandise