Water-dropper (calligraphy)

A water-dropper (Japanese: 水滴, Hepburn: suiteki, Chinese: 水滴; pinyin: shuǐdī) is a small device used in East Asian calligraphy as a container designed to hold a small amount of water. In order to make ink a few drops of water are dropped onto the surface of an inkstone. By grinding an inkstick into this water on the inkstone, particles come off and mix with the water, forming ink.

Water-dropper
A hen-shaped water dropper

Water-droppers may be made of copper, jade or other stone, or ceramic. A water-dropper has two small holes for water and air, and is designed so that only a few drops of water can fall at one time.[1]

There are a few types of water-droppers.

Type of water-dropperHanzi / KanjiPinyinRōmaji
Water-dropper with pouring spout and a handle水注shuǐzhùsuichuu
Water-droppers in diverse forms with large openings水中丞shuǐzhōngchéngsuichuujou
Jar-like water-droppers with large opening水盂shuǐyúsuiu
Frog shaped water-dropper蟾蜍chánchúsenjo

References

  1. suiteki 水滴 (in English); aisf.or.jp, consulted on: 2012-12-31
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.