“Cool Traditions” Stay in Tune with Modern Life

Sesson Fans: A Cool Breath of Tradition

Culture

Elegant illustrations in ink on handmade washi paper characterize the Sesson fans that have been made in the town of Hitachi Ōta for generations. At the helm today is a woman in her nineties, the fourth generation of her family to make the fans, and the last of a long line of craftspeople.

The Daily Routine

At around nine in the morning, Akutsu puts the bamboo frames out in the garden to dry. They are brought in again around four in the afternoon. She repeats this process every day, except when it rains, from December until the following August. Over the course of the year, around 1,000 frames are put out to dry naturally in this way.

“It’s pretty tough work. But it’s thanks to this exercise every day that I’m still so strong. I work 366 days a year, even when it’s not a leap year!”

Drying out the frames. The frames are put out to dry in the morning and taken in again in the late afternoon. The biggest risk is a sudden downpour. Neighbors sometimes stop by to alert Akutsu to showers she may not have noticed.

Akutsu happily devotes time and effort to making her fans the traditional way. The two basic parts of the process are making the bamboo frames and attaching the washi paper. Cutting the bamboo takes place in winter. Making the framework too is cold-weather work. The best bamboos for the job are thick and straight ones with wide gaps between their nodes. Akutsu gets started on making the fan frames as soon as the bamboo is cut, before it has time to dry out. (Dry bamboo is harder to cut cleanly.)

The process that requires the most skill is known as ha-ire (inserting the blade) and hone-shibori (holding the whittled bamboo). This involves cutting 40 or so snicks, each less than 1 millimeter wide, into the top of the bamboo cylinder with a sharp double-edged blade. Once the bamboo has been notched in this way, Akutsu takes hold of the bamboo and gives it a good strong pull. As if by magic, it snaps cleanly apart and breaks into thin strips of whittled bamboo. These are then bound one-by-one with igusa reeds (the material used to make tatami). At the end of this process, the strips of evenly spaced bamboo form a perfect fan shape.

Making the “windows.” Akutsu binds the spokes with igusa reed to form a neat, evenly spaced fan shape. She performs this task 20 to 25 times on an average day.

Attaching the Paper

“You have to be quick or the paste dries out,” Akutsu says, deftly pressing first the back and then the front of the paper covering to the bamboo frame and pressing with her hands to glue the bamboo and washi evenly together. Her practiced hands seem to move swiftly of their own accord, with no wasted movement.

“My husband passed away when he was 60. He had a knack for painting.” Akutsu’s husband left twenty works that are still used for the fans today—as well as Sesson’s fan paintings, these included depictions of local Mito scenery, and ink-wash paintings of morning glories. “We use copies of his pictures printed on washi. Modern technology means we can still use his pictures even today.”

Applying the paper. Akutsu’s skilled hands know just how thick bamboo spokes need to be, and can judge the correct space between spokes and the difference between the front and back of the washi by touch alone.

The fans are made from three main elements: local bamboo, the sturdy frame bound with igusa reed, and robust Nishinouchi washi. The paper, handmade in Hitachi Ōmiya, is made exclusively from the kōzo mulberry tree, making it one of the strongest and longest-lasting of all types of washi. This means that one of Akutsu’s fans will stand up to many summers of hard work.

Customers often write to say that their fans are still as good as ever after ten years; some apparently use the same fan for twenty years.

“Although it’s not really very good for business if they last that long,” Akutsu says with a happy smile.

The Secret to a Long and Happy Life

One of the things that catches the eye as soon as you enter the house is a beautiful piece of Buddhist art depicting the goddess Benzaiten. The painting was done by a customer who gave it to Akutsu as a gift.

“I say a little prayer in front of the picture twice a day. Once in the morning and then again at night, to give thanks for having lived through another day.” It is Akutsu’s painstakingly crafted fans that have brought these connections and blessings into her life. She likes to work outside on the southward-facing veranda overlooking the garden. Nowadays it has become something of a rarity, but until the early decades of the twentieth century, most Japanese houses had a veranda like this, made from wooden slats—a liminal space between the inside and outside worlds.

“It gets the sun in the winter and is quite warm. I work while the sun is up. Once it starts to go dark, that’s it for the day.” She settles under the cozy kotatsu and watches historical dramas on TV, then has a light supper and is in her futon between eight and nine.

“There is always a good breeze inside the house. It’s cold and draughty in the winter, but in summer I don't even bother with an electric fan. When I go to bed, I keep one of my paper fans by my pillow, with the word seifū [清風; cool breeze] written on it.” A simple flick of the wrists is enough to bring an instantaneous gust of cooling air.

Traditional houses were always built with an engawa or veranda—an ideal place to work: cool in summer, and well-lit in winter.

Now that her parents and husband have passed on and her three children have left home, Akutsu lives alone and is free to do as she pleases. “I work as I like, and live a nice, relaxed life. Everyone is very kind and very good about looking out for me. I’m as happy today as I have ever been,” says Akutsu at 95. The fans she makes with such care and devotion surely help to bring some of that happiness to the people who use them—together with the atmosphere of distant summer days and the refreshing breezes of times gone by.

(Originally published in Japanese on November 28, 2017. Interview and text by Mutsuta Yukie. Photos by Ōhashi Hiroshi. Banner photo: Akutsu attaches a washi covering to one of her traditional fans.)

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