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takerenji@’|˜AŽq
KEY WORD :@architecture / general terms
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Bamboo or bamboo muntins that are used for windows in dwellings where a suggestion of rusticity is needed, or in tea ceremony houses *chashitsu ’ƒŽΊ. Five, seven or nine pieces of bamboo are arranged vertically with 10-15cm spaces in between, depending on the size of the opening. Various methods are used to attach them: they are nailed to the outside of the sill *shikii •~‹, and head jamb *kamoi Š›‹; they are inserted into holes at the top and bottom on the inside side surfaces *uchinori “ΰ–@; the bottoms of the bamboo lath are inserted into holes in the sill while the tops are nailed into the head jamb. If the bamboo laths are nailed into the head jam without spaces in between them, they are called tsumeuchi ‹l‘Ε or urakumado —LŠy‘‹.
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Koudaiji Ihou'an ‚‘δŽ›ˆβ–FˆΑ (Kyoto)

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REFERENCES:
*renjimado ˜AŽq‘‹.
EXTERNAL LINKS: 
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NOTES
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(C)2001 Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System.@No reproduction or republication without written permission.
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