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What are Japanese Temari balls?

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What are Japanese Temari balls?

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  1. Temari is a Japanese symbol of perfection. It is a gift given in joy and happiness. It is sometimes called a “mother’s love ball” by old timers. In its most recent history, c. 1800 to 1950, temari was a toy ball made for young children. Previous to that, it seems to have had a colorful past.  Temari probably began as a leather game ball made for men to kick high in the air. It probably originated in China and closely resembled what is called “Hacky Sack” today. In an ancient game dating back as far as 644, its first reference in history is at the imperial court. The ball was shaped like two thick buns joined around the center with a seam. It was probably stuffed with horsehair or may have been leather stretched over a bamboo frame and inflated with an interior bladder. It seems to have been popular from the mid 600s to the mid 1300s. It was played in a court that measured 10 feet square. Four, six or eight players stood in a circle. The ball was kicked high but not far with the inside of the foot and kept from hitting the ground. Seventy different types of kick were noted and the outcome of the game seemed to be less important than the etiquette of playing.  Eventually the ball evolved into a children’s tossing ball. When feudal warlords ravaged the countryside, children were made to play inside or behind garden walls for their protection. Made to occupy children, the balls were probably made with fibers recycled from discarded clothing or woven household items such as tatami mats or other woven goods. Colors were probably carefully separated and applied to the surface by wrapping directionally to create patterns. The core was probably of paper or fabric.  Ladies of the early 17th century Imperial Court challenged each other to contests to determine whose ball was the most intricate, opulent, brightest or most subtle use of color. Ball patterns developed one from another, like generations or were embroidered in the traditional Japanese Embroidery techniques, a superbly refined style, that was used to embellish courtly clothing of the period using silk floss and metallic threads. Realistic scenes of figures in gardens with recognizable varieties of flowers and trees seemed to be favorite subjects as well as some of the traditional geometric patterns that we know today. Those highly embroidered temari balls of the 17th century and those of today seem to mimic the ornate perfection symbol of the Chinese Flaming Pearl of Happiness and Prosperity.  In Japanese Toys: Playing with History by Sakamoto Kazuya and Charles Pomeroy, published by Charles E. Tuttle Co., 1965 “A cloth Kuke ball from Hachinoe, Aomori Prefecture is shown. Balls like this, still produced by elderly people today, are made of scraps of cloth around a paper core and finished with a characteristic colored-thread pattern. Another type, the Tsugi ball is finished with cloth strips. The Goten ball, made of cloth and thread, from Yamagata Prefecture is an ornamental cloth ball made with a cotton, cloth or paper core and finished by wrapping with thread. Once made by court ladies-in-waiting, balls like these were made and sold as decorations.” Hugo Munsterberg in his book, The Folk Arts of Japan, published by Charles E. Tuttle Co., discusses typical Japanese folk toys. “The thread balls originally used for games at court… are now thought of as folk toys. They are made of paper and covered with thread, which is often embroidered into beautiful designs. The effect is somewhat like that of a colorful textile.”  These descriptions suggest that temari had a glamorous past at court that faded into folk craft and home craft as time passed and court life became more conservative.  The word “mingei” means art of the people or folk craft. Temari is considered to be within this realm or genre. Mingei is a hand-crafted item made to serve a purpose, beautiful, functional, commonly used by a broad range of people and rarely signed by the artist or craftperson. As a home craft made by mothers and grandmothers to occupy young children, temari’s most recent tradition began to fade even more by the invention of modern rubber and plastic balls. Preceding this decline, balls seem to have been made all over the country of Japan. These toy balls were made of a paper, cotton or fabric core wrapped with strips of fabric or threads, then decorated with embroidery. The ball’s tough exterior was intended for semi-rough play and the balls, though brightly colored, were generally coarse in appearance by today’s standards. Modern day balls show a great deal more complexity of design, but are now made as ornaments and no longer for play.  In today’s world, it appears that there is an attempt at reviving the look of balls of the courtly days of the Edo Period - the 1600s.

    http://www.temari.com/history.htm

    As Buddhist missionaries traveled east from India through China and Korea to Japan, they spread not only religious beliefs but culture. The Japanese craft of making temari balls is said to have its origins from kemari (football) brought to Japan from China about 1400 years ago.  The art of temari comes from simple beginnings.  Making Japanese temari balls grew as a handcraft for noble women in the early part of the Edo Period (1600-1868). Maids of the court stitched colorful globes for young Japanese girls. They would sit on the floor withthe children rolling a temari ball between them. Tossing and bouncing games followed. Over the years, region by region, more Japanese women became interested in Japanese crafts and they explored this folk art as an Oriental needlecraft and improved it. They added noisemakers to the inside to delight the ear. They added designs from Japanese crafts as well as other Asian designs, like the kiku (chrysanthemum), and they copied the colors of nature around them.  Kaleidoscope designs became favorite designs for Japanese temari balls. They used the brilliant colors of kimono silk, stitching eye-catching  temari patterns.   Sometimes, temari are called silk ball ornaments. Ever changing, becoming more and more complex, each of the new temari balls was a delight to behold, an embroidered puzzle.

    http://www.japanesetemari.com/

    Since the Edo Era (1690), the Temari ball became part of the dowry of the daughters of the Daimyo and other upper class families. By the middle of the Edo Era, Temari balls became more popular; grandmothers and mothers created the beautiful balls with silk threads for their marriage-age granddaughters and daughters. Clearly the older generation wanted the younger ones to emulate the beauty and roundness of the Temari they made with such elaborate care.

    http://japan-society.org/?nav1=section&s...


  2. Here is a website with all the information that you would ever want to know about them and more.

    http://www.temarikai.com/

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