Waraji
Waraji (草鞋) are sandals made from straw rope that in the past were the standard footwear of the common people in Japan.
Use
Waraji are basically a form of zōri, so they are worn very similarly. The main difference (in wear) between zōri and waraji is that one's toes traditionally protrude slightly over the edge of the waraji. This does not happen with zōri. The other difference is that one normally doesn't wear tabi with waraji, as opposed to zōri.
Nowadays, it is mainly Buddhist monks who wear waraji. Most Japanese wear zōri or geta.
Tying
Everyone tied their waraji differently from one another. There was no standard way to tie waraji.
Gallery
- Waraji hanging on a building
- Waraji facing left.
- Samurai putting on waraji.
gollark: *prefers statically typed functional programming languages*
gollark: You are a traitor to people of statically typed languages!
gollark: (CB)
gollark: I happen to have a chrono hatchling right now.
gollark: What are you putting up?
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.