八芳園(神前式)①

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  • Опубликовано: 25 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 22

  • @横田佳子-b8l
    @横田佳子-b8l 3 года назад +6

    教会で結婚式挙げるのも素敵ですけれども、神前結婚式も素敵ですねぇ😊💞

  • @MaryBethPetra
    @MaryBethPetra Год назад +3

    What a lovely wedding. I hope you have many very happy years together.

  • @brendamarin2291
    @brendamarin2291 Год назад +2

    Que hermoso 💖 💖 felicidades

  • @firerice3
    @firerice3 6 месяцев назад +1

    新婦さんの顔見ていると、新郎さんがすごく気に入っているように見えますね。

  • @あい-r3u8s
    @あい-r3u8s 2 года назад +2

    控えているので見させていただいていますが何だか泣きそうです。

  • @すんすん-v8s
    @すんすん-v8s 10 месяцев назад

    出雲さんでの神前結婚式かぁ~
    素敵すぎるなぁ❤

  • @seiji3769
    @seiji3769 Год назад

    私の子供が相手を連れてきたときの為の参考動画として拝見させて頂いております。私は両家の親だけでシンプルに行いました。神前式も日本古来の伝統を取り入れていてかっこいいですね!有り難うございました(*^_^*)

  • @siewheilou399
    @siewheilou399 5 лет назад +1

    Is it ok for the guests to wear red?

    • @user-te777ZWTup2e
      @user-te777ZWTup2e 3 года назад

      Shrine shrine maiden( ´ω` )/

    • @user-te777ZWTup2e
      @user-te777ZWTup2e 3 года назад

      Japanese weddings themselves and the traditions in which they were held were greatly influenced by Shintoism, Japan's original religion, but weddings themselves were usually held at home. It was not until the wedding of Crown Prince Yoshihito (later Emperor Taisho) and Princess Setsuko Kujo (later Empress Teimei) on May 10, 1900, that the "Shinto wedding ceremony" format became clear and widespread. It was the first time that a wedding ceremony was held in front of the Imperial Palace's Kenjo-daizen, and the public's desire for a similar Shinto wedding ceremony grew. In response to the growing momentum, the Jingu Bongan-kai (present-day Tokyo Grand Shrine) in Tokyo established a civilian "Shinto wedding" style based on the imperial wedding ceremony, and held a mock wedding ceremony on March 3, 1901. The style of the "Shinto wedding ceremony" practiced today is based on the one established by the Jingu Bonenkai. Japanese translation of

    • @user-te777ZWTup2e
      @user-te777ZWTup2e 3 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/T7geY2PvzOY/видео.html

    • @user-te777ZWTup2e
      @user-te777ZWTup2e 3 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/kj8FIDXvjsY/видео.html

    • @user-te777ZWTup2e
      @user-te777ZWTup2e 3 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/bOXGGgd5-Do/видео.html

  • @ccchanggg
    @ccchanggg 3 года назад

    Can I ask a question ? Why did lot of the guests wear black or dark color dress ? even the parents of both sides wore black too. Is that a part of Japanese culture or kind of the wedding rule ?

    • @milkymilky2543
      @milkymilky2543 3 года назад +2

      I have read somewhere on the internet that the guests would wear dark or simple color not to catch much attention or you can wear kimono like houmongi, yeh seems like wedding rules, because at the wedding the bride have to be the most beautiful, black seems a unlucky color but in Japan that's their tradition.

    • @ccchanggg
      @ccchanggg 3 года назад +2

      @@milkymilky2543 thank you so much. In my country, we don't wear black at someone's wedding even men don't wear black suit also.

    • @mei8511
      @mei8511 Месяц назад +1

      Super late reply, but I believe this might be because black is seen as the most formal color in Japan. If you look up the most formal kimono a man can wear, it's a black montsuki haori hakama. And to my knowledge, the most formal kimono for married women is a kurotomesode, which is also black. In weddings, you can see that the mothers of the bride and groom wear kurotomesode

    • @ccchanggg
      @ccchanggg Месяц назад

      @@mei8511 thanks so much 🙇

  • @kankichi-e2x
    @kankichi-e2x 2 года назад

    この神前結婚式を実況アナウンスするならどんな風にしゃべる?