Skip to main content
Entoten
FacebookInstagramPinterestYouTube

Menu

Skip to content
  • Blog
  • Shop
  • Artists
  • Places
  • Press
Sign In Search

Recent Posts

  • Eat, Sleep, Shave Wood: The Extraordinary Life of Woodworker Okubo Kotaro November 24, 2023
  • Hyakunin Isshu Karuta No. 23 by Chieko October 30, 2023
  • Four Tea bowls by Satoshi YOSHIKAWA: A Japanese Potter in Toronto October 20, 2023
  • Kikusumi: Chrysanthemum Charcoal by Kotani Yoshitaka August 19, 2023
  • The Saint John’s Pottery in Minnesota: An American Pottery Tradition August 1, 2023
December 2023
M T W T F S S
 123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031
« Nov    

Top Posts & Pages

  • Guide to Choosing Your Tea Whisk for Matcha
    Guide to Choosing Your Tea Whisk for Matcha
  • A Tour of the Pottery Towns of Southern Japan: Part I: Karatsu
    A Tour of the Pottery Towns of Southern Japan: Part I: Karatsu
  • Eat, Sleep, Shave Wood: The Extraordinary Life of Woodworker Okubo Kotaro
    Eat, Sleep, Shave Wood: The Extraordinary Life of Woodworker Okubo Kotaro
  • Woodwork by Jarrod Dahl: “The New Wood Culture” of Connectedness
    Woodwork by Jarrod Dahl: “The New Wood Culture” of Connectedness
  • A Very Particular Focus: A Love Affair With Tokoname Kyusu by Yamada Yutaro
    A Very Particular Focus: A Love Affair With Tokoname Kyusu by Yamada Yutaro

Categories

  • 72 Seasons Essays
  • Events, Workshops and Webinars
  • People
    • Ayumi HORIE
    • Bill GEISINGER
    • Chieko (Calligraphy)
    • Floresta Fabrica
    • Hanako NAKAZATO
    • HARADA Fumiko
    • HASHIZUME Reiko
    • HASHIZUME Yasuo
    • HORIHATA Ran
    • HOSHINO Gen
    • IKUSHIMA Harumi
    • INOUE Shigeru
    • ISHIDA Tami
    • Jarrod DAHL
    • Kazu OBA
    • Kenneth PINCUS
    • KIKUCHI Yuka
    • KITAMURA Tokusai
    • KOBAYASHI Katsuhisa
    • KOJIMA Yosuke
    • KOTANI Yoshitaka
    • KUBOTA Kenji
    • KURIYA Masakatsu
    • MAEDA Mitsuru
    • Marshall SCHEETZ
    • Mike MARTINO
    • Mitch IBURG
    • MURANAKA Yasuhiko
    • NAKAYA Yoshitaka
    • Naru (INOUE Naruhito)
    • NITTA Yoshiko
    • OKUBO Kotaro
    • Ontayaki
    • SAKAI Mika
    • Samuel JOHNSON
    • Sarah NISHIURA
    • Saratetsu
    • SASAKI Shoko
    • Satoshi YOSHIKAWA
    • Shumpei YAMAKI
    • Style Of Japan
    • TAKAHASHI Nami
    • TAKAMI Yasuhiro
    • TANIMURA Tango
    • WATANABE Ai
    • YAMADA Yutaro
    • YAMAUCHI Takeshi
    • YOKOTSUKA Yutaka
  • Baskets
  • Ceramics
  • Design
  • Glass
  • Kintsugi
  • Metal
  • Textiles
  • Urushi
  • Wood
  • Mingei
  • Research
  • Food and Craft
  • Topics
  • Tea (Chado)
  • Travels
    • Minnesota
    • Arita
    • Bizen
    • Hagi
    • Karatsu
    • Kuroe
    • Kyoto
    • Matsumoto
    • Mino / Tajimi
    • Onta
    • Shigaraki
    • Shizuoka
    • Sonoma County
    • Tokoname
    • Vietnam

Tag: thimbles

New Quilts by Sarah Nishiura and Thoughts on the Humble Thimble

By:
Ai Kanazawa
June 17, 2023Textiles Sarah NISHIURA

Today I’m very excited to let you know that we have new quilts by Sarah Nishiura in our shop->

Quilt by Sarah Nishiura, 2023
Sarah made this quilt because she hadn’t made a yellow quilt for Entoten in a while and she was also in the mood for some sunshine after a long gray winter.
Quilt by Sarah Nishiura, 2023
This quilt was made as part of a series of blue and white line of work that Sarah has made for Entoten over the years. Each work of this series has been created through a different approach using these colors.

 

Right around the time I received these much-awaited quilts, Sarah was announcing her hand quilting workshop in Chicago that begins registration on June 21st through her Instagram account. “What’s the best way to learn to hand quilt?”, she wrote. “First, buy a thimble; Second, find a teacher who can give you a few tips; Third, practice, practice, practice!”

This got me thinking about thimbles. About how the thimble that my mother showed me to use in Japan is different from the ones used here in the U.S.

Thimbles in Japan are called yubinuki and they provide the same function in hand-stitching as western thimbles to push the end of the needle through fabric and to protect your finger. But while a typical Western thimble is worn on top of the middle finger, Japanese ones are worn between the first (DIP) and second (PIP) joint of the middle finger like a ring. You can watch a short Japanese YouTube video on how to use a yubinuki here->

The Western cap-shaped thimbles are also available in Japan, but all the kimono sewers that I have known wore these ring-shaped thimbles. I would often walk into a tea break that my mother was having with her sewing buddies and everyone had these rings still attached to their fingers as they sipped tea from a cup; like it was some sort of a fellowship ring of sewers.

Yubinuki that my mother uses to sew. They can be purchased for less than a dollar a piece.

 

According to the encyclopedia Nipponica via Kotobank, the majority of pre-Meiji (1868-1912) period yubinuki were made from layered fabric in the shape of a triangle or a circle and were worn at the base of the middle finger with a string. This is because people used long thick needles to sew work clothing that were mostly made from rough linen or cotton. After Meiji, when sewing became part of the school curriculum, shorter needles and ring-shaped yubinuki became more common.

I first learned to use a yubinuki when I made a summer kimono many years ago under my mother’s instruction. It was very awkward and uncomfortable to use at first, but when I got used to wearing it, I couldn’t sew without it. I haven’t had the courage and patience to make a kimono since then, but the yubinuki has stayed with me and I look for it even when I have to occasionally re-attach a button.

Sewing set that was used by my niece in school when she was about 11 years old. The same yubinuki is in the set because they can be adjusted to fit the small fingers of children with a string. Sewing is still a part of the Japanese primary school curriculum.

 

Once, I purchased a nice ring-shaped metal yubinuki for my mother because I noticed that she was using cheap leather and plastic ones that needed replacing regularly. She was very happy when I gave it to her, but I soon noticed that she wasn’t using it. When I asked why, she hesitated, then told me that she prefers the soft adjustable ones because the bony knob on her finger joint was getting bigger as she got older, and it was difficult to put the ring through. I was embarrassed that I didn’t realize this without her telling me. Just because it was durable and more expensive, it wasn’t better for her working hands.

Many years have passed since then, and these days my mother has difficulty remembering how to sew a kimono. But she still loves stitching and when I see that brown, slightly tattered yubinuki on her finger, it makes me happy because I know that she is having a good day.

  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy & Security
  • Contact Us
  • ✉️ Newsletter Archive
  • About
  • えんとてんJapan

Subscribe To Our Newsletter

Our Mailing Address is

Entoten LLC
c/o The Den on Laurel St.
205 Laurel St. Suite 104
San Diego CA 92101

E-mail: hello@entoten.com

Copyright © 2023 ENTOTEN LLC

Studio Kotokoto is now closed. Thank you for your support over the years!
You have been redirected to Entoten, an online blog and shop that was created by one of Studio Kotokoto’s founders.
All orders received until Dec. 15th will be shipped promptly. I will close for the Holidays on Dec. 16th Thank you! -Ai