Source: my girl’s Zerque Artist: Yeondoo Jung
Collection monde en poche, Nathan, 1986. Illustrations de Véronique Ageorges. Rubrique : Textes documentaires. Rubrique : Textes documentaires.
Les Koinobori Madame Mo rendent hommage à l'une des traditions les plus joyeuses et les plus populaires du Japon : Kodomo no hi, la fête des enfants. Ce jour là, le 5 mai, des manches à air en forme de carpes koi sont hissées au vent. A travers cet objet symbolique, les parents souhaitent à leurs enfants bonheur, prospérité, joie et santé tout au long de leur vie. Revisités dans leur apparence traditionnelle, les Koinobori Madame Mo prolongent cette magie d'un jour et magnifient la déco du quotidien par leur gaieté ! Tous les Koinobori Madame Mo sont en coton bio et respectent les critères environnementaux et sociaux sur toute la filière textile. Le Koinobori trouve sa place aussi bien à l’intérieur, qu’à l’extérieur : sur les terrasses, les balcons, dans les chambres, le salon… C’est une formidable idée de cadeau créatif et poétique… Taille Small : 70 cm x 26,4 cm 100 % Coton bio Lavable en machine 30°
La Maison de la Culture du Japon à Paris consacre une exposition rétrospective au photographe Ken Domon (1909-1990), pionnier du réalisme ...
Kanji are ideographs; this means that the whole character conveys a meaning or idea (whereas in the Roman alphabet system, letters are grouped together to make words)
Avis aux personnes qui adorent se la couler douce : le Japon organise sa première compétition où les participants ne doivent rien faire pendant 90 minutes. Vous...
Vous prévoyez bientôt un séjour en famille dans les Cévennes ? Découvrez notre sélection d'activités pour enfants pour un voyage inoubliable.
Un bambino, dopo il bombardamento atomico di Nagasaki, nel 1945, porta in spalla il fratellino morto. Uno scatto che spezza il cuore
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This is the only T. ENAMI-attributed photo in the latest batch of eight flickr posts that is NOT taken from a stereoview. I say "attributed" as the same image was ctatloged by an H. SUITO of Tokyo, who might have been the photographer, or a distributor for Enami. The image was taken circa 1914-18. This image was also a popular lantern slide, as well as gracing a Japan-story page in National Geographic Magazine. SEE COMMENTS # 1 AND #2 BELOW. However, like the rest of the views in this batch, Enami also provided it as a small silver-print for tourists wanting some small, nice, "snapshot" photos to mix in with their own amateur pix of Japan. SEE MORE OF ENAMI'S CLASSIC IMAGES IN THIS FLICKr COLLECTION : www.flickr.com/photos/24443965@N08/collections/7215761388... WEBSITE DEDICATED TO ENAMI : www.t-enami.org/ RANDOM SOBA : www.flickriver.com/photos/24443965@N08/random/
Voilà un bon moment déjà, que je suis Rebecca et ses aventures au Japon sur Instagram. Un compte qui me fait voyager tout en restant chez moi. C’est tellement dépaysant…
Ca.1897-1900 T. ENAMI Glass Slide from a Stereoview. See a paper-print version of this taken from an original stereoview in ookami_dou's collection here (where he also has a link to a 3-D anyglyph version as well) : www.flickr.com/photos/15693951@N00/3325396771/ His scan of the print has a much better tonal range than my above glass slide. I shot mine with a Lumix digital camera. The slide was on light box, and the light pouring through the glass seems to have overwhelmed the camera's sensors ! ********************************************** HAPPY 150TH, T. ENAMI ! FEBRUARY 17, 2009. SESQUICENTENNIAL BIRTHDAY ANNIVERSARY. In honor of T. Enami’s 150th Birthday, the above is a one of a large SLIDE SHOW of his old images of long-gone JAPAN from the Okinawa_Soba Archives. These Feb 17, 2009 posts are in addition to the many other T. ENAMI slide, print, and stereoviews already uploaded to flickr in 2008. They can all be found in the COLLECTION and SETS dedicated to Enami’s photographic labors in Japan : www.flickr.com/photos/24443965@N08/collections/7215761388... Born in 1859, Enami, whose real name was NOBUKUNI ENAMI (or, in Japanese name order, ENAMI NOBUKUNI) was a “photographer's photographer” who since the 1880s plied his trade as an apprentice and assistant photographer in his youthful 20s, until he died at age 70 in 1929. His own studio, established in Yokohama in 1892 when he was 33 years old, passed to his son who carried on as a commercial photo processor and publisher of his father’s photographs. When the studio was “closed forever” by the fire-bombings of WW2, it had been in continual existence for 53 years—one of the longest running studios to come out of Japan’s old Meiji era. Recognized by NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC as one of the most artistic contributors to their Magazine during its first 100, a "Lost Archive" of his images is now here on flickr for the enjoyment and appreciation of all who love old images of Japan. Here’s a look at the outside of his Meiji-era studio : www.flickr.com/photos/24443965@N08/2413137039/ And an unusual view of workers on the inside : www.flickr.com/photos/24443965@N08/2494892753/ A better look at Enami and his photographic accomplishments are found at this Web page on the site dedicated to him (and don’t forget to scroll down for more pictures!) : www.t-enami.org/services Now, back to this flickr “Birthday Bash” for old Enami…
Tokyo-born Naomi Moriyama, whose family owns a farm in rural Japan, and William Doyle explain the 'Secrets of the World's Healthiest Children' in a tone that is more conversational than scientific. For someone acquainted with Japanese food culture, the book feels a tad repetitive, but there is no doubt...
A group of 1950s Japenese boys standing outdoors. This is a photo of life in Japan in the 1950s. I'm not sure of the exact date of this photo, but it is from a group of found negatives where some pictures are marked 1955.
Scanned from medium format negative. Part of a set of stock negatives from a Philadelphia company sold recently on eBay, the only one I got my hands on. I'm reading too much into it but it reminds me of Grave of the Fireflies because of timing. I'm sure the fountain, pool and building are identifiable. View more of my random acquisitions.
Voici les principes adoptés par les parents japonais dans l’éducation de leurs enfants et dont vous pourrez vous inspirer
mirai chan, cute japanese girl, kotori kawashima, photographer, photo book, manga illustrator, wisut ponnimit, japan, sado island, paris
La catastrophe de Fukushima, c'était le 11 mars 2011. Retour en images sur un événement avec lequel le monde devra vivre encore longtemps.
I love that she is getting some serious air... Gokoku Shrine, located on the grounds of Aoba Castle, is the Sendai branch of the Yasukuni shrines which honor those who died in war (56,000 of which were from Sendai). Spirits of the deceased soldiers are enshrined here--they are known as eirei. Gokoku shrines were originally called Shoheisha, but the names were changed in 1939. This shrine, originally built in 1904, has been visited by the past to emperors who paid their respects here. Miyagi Gokoku Jinja. Sendai, Miyagi.
His daughter Sonia takes us through some of the French photographer's best shots.
Japon. Bischof, Werner. Paris, 1955., 1955. B&W and color photography. 2nd printing. French text.
There's no way you can really reduce the photographic history of a place to just a few artists, let alone two. But the curators at an L.A. museum are trying.
A hand-coloured Japanese postcard of a young boy astride a dappled-grey rocking-horse, dating to the late Meiji period or early Taisho period (1907 -1918).