• About
  • Featured
  • Home
 
Muza-chan's Gate to Japan
12 years of travel throughout Japan
Discover Japan through the eyes of a seasoned traveler
  • A Japan photo per day
  • Travel in Japan
  • Customs & traditions
  • Japanese food
  • Japanese history
  •  Anime & otaku
  • Did you know?

Japanese New Year Decoration, Shimekazari

Tue, December 25, 2018, by Muza-chan

According to Shinto tradition the Toshigami, the gods of the incoming year, must be welcomed with auspicious decorations to bring good luck and prosperity in the new year.

The decoration of the house must be done after December 13th, day known as Shogatsu kotohajime - “beginning of the New Year” and before December 28th. The next day, December 29, is considered unlucky because the word for number 9 (ku) also means suffering and 29 could mean double suffering - therefore decorating in this day is taboo. Also setting up decorations on 31 is considered disrespectful, because they would be displayed only for a day…

The first decoration is Shimekazari, a rice straw rope adorned with shide and auspicious objects, which is put above the entrance door to purify the house, so the Toshigami would come to a purified place.

Click on photo for higher resolution:
Japanese New Year Decoration, Shimekazari
Japanese New Year Decoration, Shimekazari
If you want to license my photos for commercial use, please contact me

EXIF Info:

Nikon D90
Lens: VR 18-55mm F/3.5-5.6G
Focal Length: 18mm
Aperture: F/5.6
Shutter Speed: 1/250s
ISO Sensitivity: ISO 200
Merry Christmas! Venus Fort Christmas tree
Yesterday’s Japan Photo:

Merry Christmas! Venus Fort Christmas tree



  •  
     
    • # Sakura, cherry blossoms

    • # Kyoto travel

    • # Travel tips for visiting Japan

    • # Tokyo travel

    •  
    • # Modern Japanese architecture

    • # Japanese gardens

    • # The 12 surviving Japanese castles

    • # Japanese manhole covers

    •  
    • # Castles in Japan

    • # Traditional Japanese house

    • # Trains in Japan

    •  
    • # Night time photos from Japan

    • # Zen gardens

    • # The 12 surviving Japanese castles

  • Traveled areas 2007-2017
  • Creative Commons License
    Photos and text by Muza-chan are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
    If you quote or use photos from this site, you must give appropriate credit and a link to the site:
    "Based on a work at muza-chan.net"
    Permissions beyond the scope of this license may be available by contacting us (privacy policy).