Turn the heater on!
Feb. 10th, 2006 08:33 pmA couple of weeks ago I complained that Japanese houses are freezing in winter. But it has to be said that if they weren't so cold, they wouldn't be so cool... I mean they wouldn't contain the little focused, glowing points of happiness which are Japanese heaters. The pictures here show some I've collected over the past few weeks, starting with a kerosene heater I saw today in Kyoto's Efish Cafe, a heater identical to one we used to have in Scotland when I was a child at our cottage in Auchterarder.

Other heaters, painted in bright primary colours, look like lawnmowers or support a bubbling kettle, an Asian tradition which goes back thousands of years, and somehow makes me think of a Chinese hermit in a small mountain hut, reading poetry as he huddles over his heater and sips his cup of tea. Honestly, who needs more from life?

Other heaters, painted in bright primary colours, look like lawnmowers or support a bubbling kettle, an Asian tradition which goes back thousands of years, and somehow makes me think of a Chinese hermit in a small mountain hut, reading poetry as he huddles over his heater and sips his cup of tea. Honestly, who needs more from life?
(no subject)
Date: 2006-02-10 11:50 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2006-02-10 11:53 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2006-02-10 11:58 am (UTC)kettle on the hob
Date: 2006-02-10 12:25 pm (UTC)You may be familiar with furyu already, but I can find surprisingly little about it online. There's this (http://www.haikudesigns.com/lamp5.htm), but I wonder if furyu isn't actually the prototype of this slow-life thing, and, also, something with long roots going back to the erimitism of China, which was, of course, based on the nature-loving tendencies of Daoism, (a philosophy that appeals to me as a happy mix of the nature-worship of shinto and the philosophy of Buddhism).
quiet rain
Date: 2006-02-10 12:31 pm (UTC)In a day when lads and maidens of good families were busying themselves in the movement to outlaw smoking and drinking, it was nonsense to think of a clean, quiet pipe in the morning, of the pleasant bitterness of well-brewed tea, of properly heated sake. One could do no better than to sew one's own clothes in the manner of the old Zen monk, or to take a lesson from a hermit's book, and rake leaves for warming one's own sake.
(no subject)
Date: 2006-02-10 01:57 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2006-02-10 02:28 pm (UTC)Green Tea and Eastern Religions 400yen
Cognac Coffee and Philosophy 700yen
Earl Gray and Colonial History 250yen
Moccachino and Contemporary Art 450yen
(no subject)
Date: 2006-02-10 02:53 pm (UTC)And here's (http://www.shinproducts.com/index_efish.html) their website. This cafe and another we visited yesterday called Prinz (http://www.achieve-house.net/cafe9.html) (lovely lush place by the art school) are designed by a guy called Shin Nishibori.
(no subject)
Date: 2006-02-10 03:28 pm (UTC)I don't think I could live in Japan I hate being cold. That being said I live in a northern Ontario town whose average temperature for 8 months of the year is well below -20C.
(no subject)
Date: 2006-02-10 03:30 pm (UTC)The website is perfectly sweet.
(no subject)
Date: 2006-02-10 03:34 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2006-02-10 05:20 pm (UTC)japanese heaters
Date: 2006-02-10 06:15 pm (UTC)Re: japanese heaters
Date: 2006-02-10 06:32 pm (UTC)But at the same time I get the idea that they are a tradition brought into the design world only to make the same thing be more variated, because that is what people want in the end. Something that doesn't look like the neighbours. Etc, etc, etc.
Re: japanese heaters
Date: 2006-02-11 12:03 am (UTC)Re: japanese heaters
Date: 2006-02-11 12:06 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2006-02-11 03:27 am (UTC)