KAWARAMACHI, Japan (AP) - Time seems to stop here.
Dedicated artists are keeping Japan’s ancient craft of temari alive
KAWARAMACHI, Japan (AP) - Time seems to stop here.
Women sit in a small circle, quietly, painstakingly stitching patterns on balls the size of an orange, a stitch at a time.
At the center of the circle is Eiko Araki, a master of the Sanuki Kagari Temari, a Japanese traditional craft passed down for more than 1,000 years on the southwestern island of Shikoku.
Each ball, or "temari," is a work of art, with colorful geometric patterns carrying poetic names like "firefly flowers" and "layered stars." A temari ball takes weeks or months to finish. Some cost hundreds of dollars (tens of thousands of yen), although others are much cheaper.