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Under the Eye of the Snake: Beautiful, Durable Umbrellas Made of Mino “Washi”
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How Umbrellas Are Made
Even in Gifu, home of the traditional Japanese umbrella, only a few people are left today with the skills to make the bamboo frame. We watched one octogenarian craftsman at work, in a workshop redolent with the fresh smell of new bamboo.
The worker first peels the bark from the bamboo and strips away the knobby nodes. It is a job that involves lots of cutting and paring away. A cylinder of bamboo roughly 27cm in girth provides enough bamboo to make 100 ribs 3 millimeters in width. This is enough for two ja-no-me umbrellas. When these umbrellas are closed, the washi paper is folded onto the inside—unlike most umbrellas today. The ideal is for the finished umbrella to take on the shape of the original bamboo cylinder when closed. To achieve this, the workers need to reassemble the 100 bamboo ribs in their original order.
Making the ribs and spokes that will form the umbrella’s frame. Smoothing down the nodes on the inside of the bamboo (left). Using a billhook, the worker splits the bamboo into rods approximately three millimeters wide, and makes a hole for the thread to pass through the node of the bamboo (center). Shaving down the rods to make them thinner (right).
It’s enough to make the mind reel. How do they do it? Apparently there is a secret technique. I watch closely the worker closely as her hands work on the bamboo. Before cutting the bamboo, she scratches a line on the inside of the bamboo with a nail. Now all she needs to do is reassemble the cut strands so that this line re-forms, and the umbrella will take on the same shape as the original cylinder of bamboo. Once the ribs have been strung in order onto a thin rod of bamboo, the work-in-progress is delivered to another team of workers.
Using a line scratched onto the inside of the bamboo as a guide, the pieces are reassembled in their original order. The ribs are strung onto a thin strand of bamboo and dried in the sun before being moved onto the next stage.
Next, the main ribs of the umbrella are joined to the supporting spreader struts and the umbrella begins to take shape. The most important parts of the umbrella are two wooden spindles called rokuro. The atama-rokuro at the tip of the umbrella holds the main ribs of the umbrella, while the temoto-rokuro slider spindle located on the central shank of the umbrella holds the supporting struts stretchers. The worker skillfully attaches the supporting spreader struts to the ribs of the umbrella with cotton thread. The joins between the rokuro spindles and the rods are like the joints of the umbrella. It is these that enable the umbrella to open and shut cleanly and smoothly. It is remarkable that this simple frame made of bamboo bound with cotton makes for an umbrella capable of withstanding rough handling of ordinary use.
These spindles, made from the Japanese snowbell (Styrax japonicas), form the central hinges of the traditional umbrella.
Each umbrella uses two spindles—a fixed spindle at the top of the umbrella, and a sliding spindle that is used to open and close the umbrella.
Attaching the fixed spindle to the ribs of the umbrella with cotton thread requires a steady hand.
Once the basic umbrella has taken form, the next stage is to apply the washi paper canopy—another task performed by specialists. The workspace retains an atmosphere evocative of vanished days, and time seems to pass more slowly. The worker’s hands move rhythmically, and as the washi paper is stretched onto the frame, a vividly colored flower takes shape. “It’s hard to tell when you’re applying the paper,” one worker says, “but if it’s even a little bit crooked, the finished umbrella won’t fold properly.”
Attaching the paper. The ribs of the umbrella’s framework are fully opened and the strips of paper attached. Washi is also used to strengthen weak points in the frame, such as the joins between the ribs and the spokes and around the sliding spindle used to open and close the umbrella.
Getting the washi absolutely straight is not easy, since the paper has to be folded in under the inside of the framework. I speak to one young worker who says her relationship with the ja-no-me-gasa was one of love at first sight. Has that infatuation endured, I ask. “Fifteen years on, there’s still so much to learn I haven’t had time to get tired of it.” For a moment, her silently moving hands fall still and she looks up at me with a smile. Her beaming face seems to suggest that the future of the ja-no-me umbrella is in good hands.
Young people work on improving their skills at a workshop of Sakaida Eikichi Honten. Many young people are attracted to the idea of learning a traditional craft.
(Originally published in Japanese on November 21, 2017. Interview and text by Mutsuta Yukie. Photos by Ōhashi Hiroshi. Banner photo: Various colored ja-no-me umbrellas left out to dry in the sun. The umbrellas are coated with oil first to make them waterproof. It normally takes two days in the summer to dry and three in the winter. Once the umbrellas are completely dry, lacquer is painted onto the framework.)