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【HANKEIDO】Maki Fude - RYUTOMAKI FUDE in a paulownia box.

【HANKEIDO】Maki Fude - RYUTOMAKI FUDE in a paulownia box.

When you hold RYUTOMAKI FUDE, you feel the gravity at the lower center, providing a stable and pleasant writing experience. These beautiful brushes are highly suitable for cursive scripts as well as running scripts and have excellent ink absorbency. Each brush is carefully placed in a paulownia wood box, making them extremely rare and appreciated as elegant gifts.

*Maki Fude, also known as a paper-wrapped or cored brush, is made by wrapping and solidifying a core of hair with washi paper, then adding another layer of hair on top and tightening it with hemp. This was the predominant brush-making technique until the end of the Edo period.

<product details>
RYUTOMAKI FUDE is one of the "Yūshin-fude" (有心筆).

We have the following sizes available:
SIZE : SS (12mm×50mm) Suitable for 4-6 calligraphy in a HANSHI
size:S  (15mm×60mm) Suitable for 2 lines calligraphy in a HANSETSU
size:M  (18mm×70mm) Suitable for 1 or 2 lines calligraphy in a
size:L (21mm×80mm) Suitable for 1 line calligraphy in a HANSETSU

MATERIAL
COMBINATION : goat, raccoon, horse

We can also arrange hoursehair brushes.
KURO AMAO : made from Japanese black horsehair
AKA AMAO : made from Japanese red horsehair


Prezzo di listino $120.00
Prezzo di listino Prezzo scontato $120.00
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筆 from 攀桂堂 Hankeido

HANKEIDO is a unique workshop in the world that exclusively carries on the ancient craft of making "Maki Fude (written as 巻筆)" that have been handed down through generations, preserving the tradition and demonstrating exceptional Shokunin spirit. Here, brushes known as "MAKI FUDE (巻筆)" , also called "Yūshinfude" (written as 有芯筆), are meticulously crafted .
"Yūshin-fude refers to a type of brush pen where hairs are wrapped with Japanese WASHI paper around a core and then topped with additional hairs.
All 18 types of the oldest brushes preserved in the Shōsōin (Imperial Repository) from the eighth-century Heian period in Japan are of the yūshin-fude type, and they represent the most ancient form of brushes that still exist today.

筆 fude from Hankeido