Lacquered bamboo tray - Ume
This vintage tray is woven with bamboo and covered with lacquer, following the traditional method of Rantai shiki invented in the 1890s (you can read more about this craft at the bottom of the page).
The edge is framing the tray in the shape of a plum blossom.
It can be used on either side depending on your favourite patterm.
Dimensions
Diameter 35 cm / Hight 1,8 cm
Condition
Used, in great condition. No scratch or stain.
Made in Japan. Sourced in Fukuoka prefecture.
This vintage tray is woven with bamboo and covered with lacquer, following the traditional method of Rantai shiki invented in the 1890s (you can read more about this craft at the bottom of the page).
The edge is framing the tray in the shape of a plum blossom.
It can be used on either side depending on your favourite patterm.
Dimensions
Diameter 35 cm / Hight 1,8 cm
Condition
Used, in great condition. No scratch or stain.
Made in Japan. Sourced in Fukuoka prefecture.
This vintage tray is woven with bamboo and covered with lacquer, following the traditional method of Rantai shiki invented in the 1890s (you can read more about this craft at the bottom of the page).
The edge is framing the tray in the shape of a plum blossom.
It can be used on either side depending on your favourite patterm.
Dimensions
Diameter 35 cm / Hight 1,8 cm
Condition
Used, in great condition. No scratch or stain.
Made in Japan. Sourced in Fukuoka prefecture.
What is Rantai Shikki?
Short story
It is said that this technique was invented around 1890, in the Kurume region (Prefecture of Fukuoka). At the time, the painter and lacquer artist Shogetsu Hanbe was invited to Kurume and collaborated with other artists to create this using technique, using the local bamboo production.
Bamboo is a wonderful material, strong and flexible. Its properties have led to it being widely used in the creation of domestic objects over the centuries. In this region of Japan, the production of bamboo woven baskets and trays is especially renowned.
But when Hanbe and his collaborators start to develop this technique, they want to make these crafted baskets more durable and more beautiful at the same time.
Technique
Once the basket is woven, several layers of lacquer are applied to it.
Lacquer has a very high covering power but it is applied in very thin layers, which requires very good eyes. To make sure that each layer is completely covering the previous one, it is customary to alternate lacquer colours for each layer, so that we can see if there is any place we might have missed. For example, we apply one first layer of red, which is covered by a layer of black, covered by a layer of red, then black, and so on.
This method also allows creating patterns by polishing the last layer and revealing the ones underneath.
This method was especially innovative because it made it possible to reappreciate a modest everyday material that is bamboo, by offering it the brilliant finish of lacquer, and the enhancement of the weaving patterns by the play of colours.
Lacquer also brings a brand new feel to the surface it is applied on, but it is also very strong and protective. Once it is perfectly dry, lacquer protects from moisture and prevents mould to develop on the material. At a time when dehumidifiers and air-conditioning, we can imagine it was very appreciated!