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Noh Costume (Nuihaku) with Lilies and Courtly Carriages 縫箔 茶地百合御所車模様ぬいはく ちゃじゆりごしょぐるまもよう

Description

Nuihaku are Noh costumes with designs in embroidery and embossed gold leaf.

This garment features large lilies and small courtly carriages embroidered on a brown ground. This inverse sense of proportion creates a strange impression. Perhaps it conveys a sense of viewing distant carriages through the lilies. No other seasonal flowers are depicted here apart from these large lilies. This rare design is not found on any other garments from this era.

Though the gold leaf pattern has faded considerably, you can still see it in places. For example, the undulating stripe patterns on the unembroidered sections of the brown ground are rendered using pressed gold foil. You can also make out a Manji Buddhist cross pattern within the waves. The designs must have looked even more opulent when the costume was first made.

With its undulating stripe patterns, a common feature of garments worn by the nobility, and its courtly carriage motifs, this garment exudes a deep admiration for Japanese court culture.

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Data source

ColBase

"ColBase: Integrated Collections Database of the National Institutes for Cultural Heritage, Japan" is a service that enables a multi-database search of the collections in the four national museums (To...

April 6, 2026