#811
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Simple Taisho Era Buildings
Taisho era or early post-war era Japanese buildings and other paper models, another great discovery posted at:
https://papermau.blogspot.com/2021/05/the-greasy-spoon-restaurant-paper-model.html |
#812
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The first link below is from the same collection as the previous Nahan-c35 link, but I just want to add that these links are a gold mine if you're looking for late 70s/early 80s Japanese trucks - lots of these used trucks could be seen on Philippine roads starting in the 90s. The rear parts are separate so you can mix and match various box bodies, flatbeds and dump beds. Thanks John!
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#814
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TRADITIONAL JAPANESE SCHOOL ROOM with Crime scene accessories
As you know from watching Japanese (and Korean movies), their high schools are extremely dangerous places, inhabited by violent motor-scooter riding girl-gangs (Sukeban (スケバン/助番 - 스케 반 / 보조 번호)) and vengence seeking school-girls armed with swords, yo-yos , machine guns and yes, even flamethrowers, who rack up higher body counts than the protagonist of a chambara (チャンバラ) movie.
Here are the paper model downloads with which you can make your own diorama of a typical Japanese school room complete with crime scene accessories. The pictures on the web site suggest that your Japanese school room model will be particularly authentic if you add a dead cat. https://otarunet.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/DSC01182-min-1024x685.jpg https://otarunet.com/it/webdesign/wooden-school-building/ https://otarunet.com/it/webdesign/craft-kanshiki-genba/ https://otarunet.com/it/webdesign/craft-cardboard-paperbag/ https://otarunet.com/it/webdesign/craft-cardboard2/ https://otarunet.com/it/webdesign/craft-miniaturebook/ |
#815
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The owner of the above web site (Traditional Japanese School Room) actually appears to be very fond of cats, and has cute cat pictures posted on other web pages.
https://otarunet.com/wordpress/wp-co...20150302ec.jpg If you explore his web site you will find them, as well as image templates for enhancing cat photographs. |
#816
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Many more Japanese paper models that Mauther discovered and is sharing with us, please click on each one to see the model.
PAPERMAU: Robio - The Little Blue Robot Paper Toy - by Shunichi Makino PAPERMAU: Tomioka Wako Traditional Japanese House Miniature Paper Model by Rekitama Wako A post war or rural bar: PAPERMAU: A Japanese Bar Paper Model In 1/160 Scale - by Paper Structures PAPERMAU: The Ephemeral Museum - A Classic Japanese Doll House In 1/12 Scale by Paper Museum - Assembled by Papermau Steel production for traditional tools: PAPERMAU: Takadono Tatara - An Old Steel Industry Paper Model - by Sugatani https://papermau.blogspot.com/2021/0...per-model.html |
#817
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A single sheet from a tatebanko
A web page with some information about tatebanko
https://www.arc.ritsumei.ac.jp/lib/vm/kabuki2015_e/2015/12/g12.html An article about tatebanko by members of papermodelers Japanese Woodblock-Printed Dioramas - Issuu Another web page about tagtebanko with links to tatebanko you can download https://aubryscrafts.com/aubrys-quick-guide-to-tatebanko-the-art-of-japanese-paper-dioramas/ A link to an ancient and almost forgotten posting about tatebanko https://papermau.blogspot.com/2021/06/vintage-japanese-tatebanko-by-john.html Last edited by John Wagenseil; 07-01-2021 at 10:47 PM. |
#818
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Large Tatebanko of Tea House scene from Chusingura (Tale of 47 Ronin)
Tatebanko of a scene from Chusingura (Tale of 47 Ronin). It was published in 1870 in Osaka, Japan. When assembled the tatebanko will be rather large.
The title is 「大新板切組灯ろう」 「忠臣蔵七段目一力茶屋場」「四枚続の内」 "Daishin Itakiri Gumi Lantern" "Tadaomizo 7th Stage Ichiriki Chaya" "Four Sheets" Which I take to mean it is Act 7 and takes place at a tea house. ARC浮世絵ポータルデータベース/Ukiyo-e Portal Database - 検索結果 https://www.dh-jac.net/db/nishikie/results.php?f3=arcUP7362&f9=*&f11=1&-max=50&enter=portal The inter-phase is a little tricky, click on each image to open it in new tab, then click on image to access the large downloadable image file. Use the ruler next to the print to determine the sixe of paper needed to print the images at their original size. One of the original sheet is about 25 cm high. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- A print of Act 7 Act 7 (Shichidanme), from the series "The Revenge of the Loyal Retainers (Chushingura)" | The Art Institute of Chicago A summary of the plot of Chusingura Kanadehon Chūshingura - Wikipedia Last edited by John Wagenseil; 07-03-2021 at 02:23 PM. |
#819
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Dimensions of Japanese Papers
Japanese Print Formats and Sizes
http://www.myjapanesehanga.com/home/articles/japanese-print-formats-and-sizes The information from the above site is contained on the attached PDF See also: Glossary of Terms Useful for Discussing Woodblock Prints: http://mercury.lcs.mit.edu/~jnc/prints/glossary.html An archived site with more information about size of Japanese papers. https://web.archive.org/web/20160214013249/www.hanga.com/sizes.cfm |
#820
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Yotsuya Kaidan, a 6 sheet Tatebanko
Yotsuya Kaidan, a 6 sheet Tatebanko by Hasegawa Sadenobu, published during the Ansei Era, (January 15, 1855 – April 8, 1860).
Yotsuya Kaidan is a story of a jilted lover, vengeance, madness and vicious ghosts. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yotsuya_Kaidan A movie versions of the Kabuki play are available. This tatebanko was posted a long time ago by PatCraft, but the orginal link no longer works: below are the links to each sheet of the set. The tatebanko has working parts, tabs that reveal changes in the scene or ghostly visions. Trigger warning: Gore, ghosts, violence, corpses. May not be suitable for young audiences. https://www.dh-jac.net/db/nishikie/results-big.php?f44[]=%E7%B5%84%E4%B8%8A%E7%B5%B5&&enter=portal&lang=en &skip=0&singleskip=1 https://www.dh-jac.net/db/nishikie/results-big.php?f44[]=%E7%B5%84%E4%B8%8A%E7%B5%B5&singleskip=1&skip=0&-max=50&enter=portal&lang=en https://www.dh-jac.net/db/nishikie/results-big.php?f44[]=%E7%B5%84%E4%B8%8A%E7%B5%B5&-format=resultsp.htm&-max=30&singleskip=2&enter=portal&lang=ja&skip=0 https://www.dh-jac.net/db/nishikie/results-big.php?f44[]=%E7%B5%84%E4%B8%8A%E7%B5%B5&-format=resultsp.htm&-max=30&singleskip=3&enter=portal&lang=ja&skip=0 https://www.dh-jac.net/db/nishikie/results-big.php?f44[]=%E7%B5%84%E4%B8%8A%E7%B5%B5&-format=resultsp.htm&-max=30&singleskip=4&enter=portal&lang=ja&skip=0 https://www.dh-jac.net/db/nishikie/results-big.php?f44[]=%E7%B5%84%E4%B8%8A%E7%B5%B5&-format=resultsp.htm&-max=30&singleskip=5&enter=portal&lang=ja&skip=0 https://www.dh-jac.net/db/nishikie/results-big.php?f44[]=%E7%B5%84%E4%B8%8A%E7%B5%B5&-format=resultsp.htm&-max=30&singleskip=6&enter=portal&lang=ja&skip=0 |
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edo period tatebanko |
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