Sekka Zusetsu
Sekka Zusetsu (雪華図説) is a figure collection written by Doi Toshitsura (Japanese Kanji: 土井 利位), the fourth daimyō of Koga Domain (古河藩) in 1832.
Overview
Koga Domain was located at the center of the Kantō Plain. Unlike other areas, the people in Koga Domain had much snow, so the territory of the domain was a good place to observe snowflakes.
Doi Toshitsura, the fourth daimyō of Koga Domain started observing snowflakes as his hobby with his own microscope which was imported from the Netherlands, and he drew pictures and studies about snowflakes in a book (Sekka Zusetsu). This figure collection of his is highly valued today in Japan as the first Japanese figure collection of snowflakes.
It's said that Toshitsura had many difficulties to observe snowflake properly because snowflakes need −10 to −15 Celsius degrees temperature to hold their correct shapes. So Toshitsura had to observe them under very cold temperatures.
This book was written for him and his family (Doi clan, 土井氏), but it had great influence on Japanese textile-patterns also. As soon as he wrote the book, snowflake patterns (雪華模様) became popular among ordinary people in Edo.
How Toshitsura observed
- Put a black cloth outside at night when it seems cold enough to snow.
- Receive snowflake with the cloth (see 1).
- If you get snowflakes, pick them up carefully and put into a black cup.
- Be careful not to breathe on them, and observe them with a microscope.