Network Logo
Translate Page To German Tranlate Page To Spanish Translate Page To French Translate Page To Italian Translate Page To Japanese Translate Page To Korean Translate Page To Portuguese Translate Page To Chinese
  Number Times Read : 9      
Categories

Advice
Career
Cooking
Crafts
Education
Entertainment
Gardening
Healthy Living
Holidays
Home
Medical
Our Pets
Relationships
Weddings
Women Only
 
Stats
Total Articles: 26728
Total Authors: 4190
Total Downloads: 81146


Newest Member
Simona Rusnakova
 


   

Choose The Perfect Netsuke To Bead With Silk



[Valid RSS feed]  Category Rss Feed - http://www.ParentsLead.com/rss.php?rss=387
By : Anita Satin    4 or more times read
Submitted 2008-02-14 02:22:25
Netsuke toggles were created originally for the practical uses for hanging pouches, small crafted boxes or small woven baskets for being able to carry along small personal items, and were worn around the waist. Boxwood and several other hard woods are another very popular material used, but materials of boar tusk, hippopotamus teeth, rhinoceros horns also carve very well for the small detailed Netsuke. For accent to Netsuke, precious metals are sometimes used for various accents upon the Netsuke item.

Netsuke is a functioning item of beauty that began around the 17th century. Created by the highly artistic Japanese for practical uses, but also being a very unique miniature sculpture of expression or of story telling type of art at the same time. It is this combination that has carried the art of Netsuke throughout many centuries on into the art world of today. The true originally translated definition of Netsuke is root and to suspend or hang . The very first Netsuke were made of roots and twigs for the useful purpose of being toggles.

Since Japanese men s clothing originally had no pockets, there was a need for safely carry their personal items on themselves throughout the day. Netsuke toggles were created originally for the practical uses for hanging pouches, small crafted boxes or small woven baskets for being able to carry along small personal items, and were worn around the waist. The Japanese men found that the variations of pouches, boxes or small woven baskets with the toggle were perfect for holding their tobacco and pipes, seals, money and medicines without worries of lost items.

Originally and even today it is made from various types of materials. Elephant and mammoth ivory have been the most used materials. Boxwood and several other hard woods are another very popular material used, but materials of boar tusk, hippopotamus teeth, rhinoceros horns also carve very well for the small detailed Netsuke. More rarely used materials that work very well are horn bill ivory clay coral lacquer and woven cane, and porcelain. For accent to Netsuke, precious metals are sometimes used for various accents upon the Netsuke item.

There have always been many variations of Netsuke characters and formations, but originally stayed in the ranges of what the Japanese knew of everyday life that surrounded them within their culture. These were in the areas of people, plants, plant products, animals, nature, deities, non living material items, mythical creatures, abstract references, and sexual content that may or may not be subtle.

Although the most productive time period for Japanese Netsuke in being produced was during the Japanese Edo period of 1615 1868, this highly detailed art is still carried out around the world today by a small amount of highly skilled artists whom specialize in Netsuke miniature items. In today s Netsuke market, there are the cheap molded reproduction models that average in price of around 30.00 dollars and then there are the real intricately detailed, hand carved Netsuke items that are one of a kind collectible Netsuke. Since these are unique original Netsuke made of expensive or rare materials, they are much higher in prices and can run 10,000 dollars or more.
Author Resource:- Anita Satin Choudhary writes for Ivory and Art Gallery. Browse the gallery for unique collection of artifacts ranging from http://www.ivoryandart.com Netsuke to Mammoth Ivory, Coral Sculptures and Russian Silver And Crystal
Article From Parents Lead!

HTML Ready Article. Click on the "Copy" button to copy into your clipboard.




Firefox users please select/copy/paste as usual
New Members
select
Sign up
select
learn more
Affiliate Sign in
Affiliate Sign In
 
Nav Menu
Home
Login
Submit Articles
Submission Guidelines
Top Articles
Link Directory
About Us
Contact Us
Privacy Policy
RSS Feeds

Actions
Print This Article
Add To Favorites

 
Sponsors

Purchase this software

 

From Family Stew



The Free Ride In Public Schools
27 Nov 2008 at 11:28am
Why should public-school students bother doing homework or studying hard if they advance to the next grade no matter how bad they do in class? That would be dumb, and these kids are not dumb.
Punishing the Victim -- Why Public Schools Pressure Parents To Give Their Kid...
27 Nov 2008 at 11:28am
It is normal for bright, energetic kids to be bored in public school. To solve the problem of "unruly" children, public schools now pressure parents to give their kids potentially dangerous mind-altering drugs.
The Graceful Art of Defrazzling - For Mothers
27 Nov 2008 at 11:28am
An introduction to a "defrazzled" method of surviving life as a mother

From Expanding Links



What Can You Do To Beat Your Competition?
26 Nov 2008 at 3:57pm
Your competition is more established than your website is. How do you get ahead of them?
Methods of Website Promotion
26 Nov 2008 at 3:57pm
Some thoughts and experiences related to website promotion and methods for gaining added exposure...
How to Get Directories to Submit Your Site - With this 5 Steps Guide!
26 Nov 2008 at 3:57pm
Simple 5 steps guide to get all those directories for your site submission campaign.



If you are interested in learning about and discussing social services and social services agency management, please visit SocialServicesAgencyManagement.com where you will also learn about the new ecological model of excellence.

A Service Of: (©) Leadership Village - all rights reserved