🍂 How to make a Japanese Shimenawa 日本のしめ縄を作る方法 - Abandoned Japan 日本の廃墟

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  • Опубликовано: 10 мар 2007
  • 🍂 Crafting Traditions: The Art of Shimenawa
    Within the calm ambiance of a traditional Japanese setting, Yumiko Bell's uncle masterfully crafts a shimenawa-a sacred prayer rope deeply rooted in Japan's native Shinto religion. Demonstrating age-old techniques with skilled hands, he weaves together the fibers, creating a symbol of reverence. Beyond a mere decorative element, the shimenawa serves to demarcate spaces of spiritual significance, from sacred shrines to venerable natural landmarks. Through this craft, the essence of Shintoism, which venerates nature and its spirits, comes alive, connecting the present to an ancient past.
    Kurt Bell, a seeker of stories and traditions, ventures into the heart of Japanese culture, drawing out tales that resonate with the soul. Born in America in 1964, Kurt's explorations lead him to corners less trodden, his findings immortalized in writings such as "Going Alone" and "No More Looking Out For Number One."
    ➡️ Dive deeper into Kurt's world with "Going Alone", a tapestry of introspection and awe 🤠🏜️☀️: a.co/d/6SORY8N
    🌐 Website: goingalone.org
    📧 Email: dinnerbytheriver@gmail.com
    👍 Support my endeavors on Patreon: / softypapa
    Be safe... But not too safe.
    #KurtBell #Shimenawa #ShintoTraditions 🍂⛩️🇯🇵
    CREDITS:
    "Japanese Falls" image: Lane Brown | View More: lanebrownart.blogspot.com/p/po...
    "Song For Kurt" theme: Nowherians | Listen Here: nowherians.bandcamp.com/

Комментарии • 50

  • @pcopete
    @pcopete 14 лет назад +7

    According to Amy Katoh's 'Otafuku Origins', when Amaterasu Omikami had hidden in a cave, bringing darkness and chaos to the world, Uzume's dance and ensuing hilarity of the gods, brought her out. Shimenawa was used to seal the cave, avoiding Amaterasu going back to the cave, thus returning light and order to the world. This legend prompted us to look for shimenawa in Google, leading us to see this wonderful video.

    • @user-ws3st7hu2l
      @user-ws3st7hu2l 3 года назад +1

      Good! Now, discover what that myth actually represents within you!

  • @rmmc99
    @rmmc99 Год назад +2

    That's so beautiful! I want to make one for my home.

    • @softypapa
      @softypapa  Год назад +3

      They are beautiful and very interesting.

  • @sz42781
    @sz42781 13 лет назад +8

    Japanese culture has amazing ingenuity!

  • @markccful
    @markccful 11 лет назад +2

    I don't know exactly what he did, but it looks like it is similar to making robe, and in that case you can start by spinning the two of them and twist those two together. Afterwards you can spin the third and then spin it together with the two first.

  • @Goat5611
    @Goat5611 13 лет назад +2

    great video! my wife's father does this the exact same way!

  • @SamChaneyProductions
    @SamChaneyProductions 12 лет назад

    Beautiful!

  • @mesugo
    @mesugo 10 лет назад

    Great video, thank you!

  • @namelessDude85
    @namelessDude85 13 лет назад

    thanx for this awesome video. i got the hang of the shimenawa perfectly.
    :)

  • @taikokuro
    @taikokuro 16 лет назад

    very interesting...
    congratulations...

  • @mariaanderson2560
    @mariaanderson2560 4 года назад +1

    どうも有難うございました

    • @softypapa
      @softypapa  3 года назад +1

      こちらこそ、ありがとう

  • @EtoileSerpent
    @EtoileSerpent 12 лет назад +1

    Thank you for this. :) I just learned how to fold the paper last month! ^^

    • @rmmc99
      @rmmc99 Год назад

      I've been making shide for about a year and hanging them all over. Now I want to make a shimenawa to hang some from. I think that would look nice on my oldest cedar tree or above my doorway. Perhaps both.

    • @khuxiong4589
      @khuxiong4589 11 месяцев назад

      Is it just regular paper like I could just do printing paper?

  • @cnett66
    @cnett66 13 лет назад +1

    ha its funny i watched almost all of these and the leech vs earthworm vid is in the suggestions the vid that hooked me on these great vids keep up the awesom vids and god bless kami sama ga mamoru youni if thats how u say it

  • @tracypaxton1054
    @tracypaxton1054 6 лет назад

    What do you call the bell shaped tassels which hang from the Shimenawa and are made of the same material? (Not the Shide paper streamers.)

  • @SargonBighorn
    @SargonBighorn 14 лет назад +1

    I noticed the first step was not captured in the video. He twisted two bundles and left the middle bundle untwisted? Is that correct? Or are all three twisted? It's not a basic three strand braid. Did he twist two bundles around one?

  • @uzerofutube
    @uzerofutube 13 лет назад

    I thought it was a bushcraft rope making tutorial, but how come you could run into all these things in Japan?

  • @spaceman2115
    @spaceman2115 17 лет назад +3

    That is so awesome! I wish I could make a Shimenawa. At least I know how to make the paper things (don't know name Is it Shimenawa too?). I am a self profest Shintoist and since Im a westener there are no Shrines for almost infinite miles. So, the only way I can worship is through a Kamidana-whitch I don't have T_T-. Any advice on how to make one out of wood? Arigatogozaimasu, Ja ne, Softypapa-San!!!

    • @user-nw5bz4yl9j
      @user-nw5bz4yl9j 2 года назад +2

      the paper is called shide :)

    • @rmmc99
      @rmmc99 Год назад +1

      @@user-nw5bz4yl9j I came here to say the same. 😁

  • @dymonddog3044
    @dymonddog3044 8 лет назад

    I wish that my parents were the same religion as me

  • @JINATAHISAKAZU
    @JINATAHISAKAZU 11 лет назад +2

    Shimenawa expresses a cloud thunderstorm
    It expresses thanks naturally
    A yokozuna of the sumo is the same, too
    SAGARI of the sumo wrestler expresses rain.
    Sumo is an event of the harvest festivals in old days.
    下手な英語で ごめんなさい

  • @OscelotTheCat
    @OscelotTheCat 12 лет назад +1

    @grangersmith They're shide. They're used for a few things.. primarily on rope, but also some times on tall sticks which the kami inhabit during ceremonies and the kannushi (priest) flutter over the crowd or item, usually for purification.

    • @rmmc99
      @rmmc99 Год назад

      When are they most commonly used? The shimenawa and the shide? Is there a festival that they are commonly used for?

    • @OscelotTheCat
      @OscelotTheCat Год назад +1

      @@rmmc99 Shimenawa are used for purification whenever service requires it, assuming you aren't doing oharae in the river. Shide are used to denote a sacred space and create a barrier much like a wiccan circle would. Thus you'll see them meshed in to rope placed around trees and at the entrances to shrines, as well as to create a sacred space to work within when a service is held off of temple grounds, or as an extra layer of protection around various sacred items.

  • @InconditeAndRisible
    @InconditeAndRisible 5 лет назад +1

    What kind of plant do they generally use to make shimenawa? It looks like a grass of some sort but I wasn't sure.

  • @grangersmith
    @grangersmith 12 лет назад +2

    Beautiful,what does the zig zag paper signify or is symbolic of? I am very curious about that because it seems to be a powerful Shinto symbol.

    • @weirdoscreation
      @weirdoscreation 4 года назад +2

      Sorry for late respond. It's a protection from evil spirits(?) It's used to seal evil spirits

    • @rmmc99
      @rmmc99 Год назад

      The folded paper is called 'shide' and they create a barrier against evil.

  • @user-ws3st7hu2l
    @user-ws3st7hu2l 3 года назад

    Symbols live on; inner meanings they purport to represent appear to have been lost to many.

    • @softypapa
      @softypapa  7 месяцев назад

      Thank you for sharing your thoughts. I’m sorry it took me so long to respond. Have a wonderful day! :-)

  • @LamiNalchor
    @LamiNalchor 3 года назад +1

    How can you get a bundle of rice straw?

    • @softypapa
      @softypapa  7 месяцев назад +1

      That’s a very good question. In fact, my wife’s uncle is a Rice farmer and he is able to use his own leftover rice straw. I imagine that people in the community that do not have their own straw can simply get some from their local neighborhood farmers. I’m sorry it took me so long to respond. Have a wonderful day! :-)

    • @LamiNalchor
      @LamiNalchor 7 месяцев назад

      @@softypapa no problem.

  • @loupbas
    @loupbas 9 лет назад +3

    I call them ARTISANS.

    • @softypapa
      @softypapa  9 лет назад +2

      R. St-P. That's a good word for describe what they do. Thank you for sharing. :-)

  • @alanloewen4148
    @alanloewen4148 6 лет назад +2

    What plant is he using?

  • @Vitance
    @Vitance 11 лет назад

    lulz shouldn't it be "shouldn't"??

  • @Andrew10945
    @Andrew10945 14 лет назад

    man looks painful on the hands.... lol

  • @Vitance
    @Vitance 11 лет назад

    You learned Japanese from a book, didn't you? A bad one at that. すごい!きれいです!is two exclamations, and means "Wow! It's pretty!" すごくてきれいです! means "It is amazing and pretty" or "It is pretty because it is amazing."
    If you spoke Japanese, you would see why your suggestion is stupid and clumsy. Protip: amateurs shouldn't try to correct fluent speakers.

  • @gnbt01
    @gnbt01 11 лет назад

    (´・ω・`)仲良くやれや~

  • @GrayAu
    @GrayAu 11 лет назад

    1. You did say you were fluent because I attempted to correct you and you said not to correct fluent speakers. Come on, bro.
    2. Getting under my skin? Frankly I feel no annoyance b/c I'm the same kind of person you are, you troll. However you apparently are new to the internet b/c none of us admit to those things.
    3. Hypocrites are the worst kind of people, but you responding to me means I was under your skin first (madbro?) so you are one as well.
    4. Fluency is speaking, not writing.