Papering shoji turned out to be fairly simple and actually quite fun. We laid the frame down on our kitchen floor, spread glue on the wood, and then rolled shoji paper slowly over the frame as seen in this picture.
After the shoji paper was securely glued to the frame, we left it on the kitchen floor to dry. This wasn't a real brilliant move on our part, as Tyler soon put his foot through the paper. After ripping everything off and starting over, we moved the frames to a safer location and allowed them to finish drying before trimming the excess paper off the edges.
Although I can now say that we have beautiful shoji in our guest room, I also have to wonder, as Tyler did, whose stupid idea was this? You can't say that we're just clumsy, foreign oafs because the Japanese break their shoji too. Although I've seen many fist sized or finger sized holes in shoji over the years, the best example that I've ever seen and the best case yet for not having these in the home comes from our friend's house here in Ogaki.
And yet, despite all this, I would re-paper my shoji a thousand times for its sheer beauty, simplicity, and for the way warm sunshine filters through the paper. Shoji may not be able to withstand the playful poke of a child's finger or the gentle nudge of an adult knee, but perhaps the creation of something beautiful, yet impermanent, was what the Japanese had in mind all along.
6 comments:
So I'm guessing that the paper is not to expensive to buy and pretty easily replaced if you don't have any mishaps.
Heather,
I sent you an invite to the family blog. Ambrose & Co. Please sign up. Tyler you can too if you want to! I need to know when you do so I can give you administrative privileges. So you can post! It's fun we already have Posts and pictures!
Thanks Heather you can now Post @ Ambrose & Co..
I enjoyed reading your blog heather. Something about Japanese construction lured me into that. You can post those kinds of blogs any day for us simple minded folks (smile).
I think mylar would work very well there also but it wouldn't share the delicate nature that paper does.
My work verification was limgobuk-what a weird word to verify in order to post a comment.
The paper is fairly cheap -- about 5 dollars worth of paper would cover four doors.
Isn't mylar kind of metallic (like mylar blankets)? Maybe I'm confused . . .
And yes, the words that you have to type to post are strange, but at least this way I don't get spammed. :)
By strange I mean sometimes they look like real words with vowels and consanants.
Mylar can look metallic but it also can look like plastic. A lot of today's sunscreening for cars is made out of different shades of mylar.
Post a Comment