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seigaiha@ΒŠC”g
KEY WORD :@ 1@art history / paintings,@2@architecture / decorations
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1@Also pronounced seikaiha. A wave design made of the arches of concentric circles superimposed upon one another so that only the upper portion of each set of circles is visible. It was used in China to depict the sea on ancient maps. In Japan it appears earliest on the clothing of a haniwa ϋ—Φ figure of a girl excavated in Gunma prefecture. Beginning in the Heian period it was used on mo Φ, a form of shirt worn with the twelve-layers juunihitoe \“ρ’P of kimono ’…•¨. It appears on Seto ceramic ware *setoyaki £ŒΛΔ and lacquerware inkstone cases of the Kamakura period. In the Edo period Seikai Kanshichi ΒŠCŠ¨Ž΅ devised a way to paint the design in black lacquer using a brush; some authorities suggest this may have been the origin of the term seigaiha to describe this design.

2@A decorative pattern of semicircular repeated wave shapes used to decorate the built up ridges of temples, halls, and gates during the proto-modern period (latter 16-19c). It is one of the simplest patterns with broad, curved tiles placed in rows. The tiles of every other row straddle the meeting point of every two tiles below. The pattern has a wide variety of other uses:
1. A pattern drawn with a broom on sand in a garden *samon »•Ά.
2. A pattern formed when wave-shaped tiles were plastered to outside walls. During the 16-19c.
3. A pattern used in textile dying which first appeared on costumes for ancient court dance gagaku ‰λŠy.
4. A pattern used for mother-of-pearl inlay *raden —†ην, which became popular in the Genroku Œ³˜\ era (1688-1703)
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seigaiha@

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