WASHI HAIR SCISSORS : HAIR SCISSORS

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Washi Hair Scissors


washi hair scissors
    scissors
  • An action in which two things cross each other or open and close like the blades of a pair of scissors
  • An instrument used for cutting cloth, paper, and other thin material, consisting of two blades laid one on top of the other and fastened in the middle so as to allow them to be opened and closed by a thumb and finger inserted through rings on the end of their handles
  • an edge tool having two crossed pivoting blades
  • a wrestling hold in which you wrap your legs around the opponents body or head and put your feet together and squeeze
  • a gymnastic exercise performed on the pommel horse when the gymnast moves his legs as the blades of scissors move
    washi
  • (Japanese paper) is made from the young Japanese kozo, mitsumata, and gampi trees. It is a common mistake to believe that Japanese calligraphy is done on rice paper.
  • The Japanese paper mulberry, gampi and mitsumata trees are harvested for their long, study fibers that are used in paper making.
  • A special paper used to clean a sword.
    hair
  • Any of the fine threadlike strands growing from the skin of humans, mammals, and some other animals
  • hair's-breadth: a very small distance or space; "they escaped by a hair's-breadth"; "they lost the election by a whisker"
  • A similar strand growing from the epidermis of a plant, or forming part of a living cell
  • filamentous hairlike growth on a plant; "peach fuzz"
  • a covering for the body (or parts of it) consisting of a dense growth of threadlike structures (as on the human head); helps to prevent heat loss; "he combed his hair"; "each hair consists of layers of dead keratinized cells"
  • A very small quantity or extent

Washi
Washi
Washi (??) is a type of paper made in Japan. Washi is commonly made using fibers from the bark of the gampi tree, the mitsumata shrub (Edgeworthia papyrifera), or the paper mulberry, but also can be made using bamboo, hemp, rice, and wheat. Washi comes from wa meaning Japanese and shi meaning paper, and the term is used to describe paper made by hand in the traditional manner. Washi is generally tougher than ordinary paper made from wood pulp, and is used in many traditional arts. Origami, Shodo, and Ukiyo-e were all produced using washi. Washi was also used to make various everyday goods like clothes, household goods, and toys as well as vestments and ritual objects for Shinto priests and statues of Buddha. It was even used to make wreaths that were given to winners in the 1998 Winter Paralympics. Several kinds of washi, referred to collectively as Japanese tissue, are used in the conservation and mending of books. Washi was developed from the traditional Chinese paper-making process.
Washi Ningyo
Washi Ningyo
mi primera washi ningyo, es una maiko, trate de hacerla lo mas apegada posible, el cabello es real lacio negro arreglado como wareshinobu y con hana kanzashi hecho a mano, el obi atadao como fukurazuzume, obiage y obijime ademas de tres cuentas como obidome, bolsa de mano, okobos

washi hair scissors
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