Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional stories - Why should European bread be more popular with "Japanese elements"?

Why should European bread be more popular with "Japanese elements"?

Japanese elements usually appear in the decoration of houses, so it must be attractive to add them to bread. Japanese elements are very popular all over the world. Let me introduce you to the loveliness of Japanese elements. With the development of modern civilization and the introduction of western culture, traditional Japanese houses are no longer the first choice of Japanese people. Even if houses are built, they are mostly reinforced concrete now, and almost all houses are foreign. Thousands of years of traditional "life culture" is gradually disappearing in the lives of modern young people.

But for many foreigners, traditional Japanese houses are very attractive. Even if many people can't own traditional single-family buildings, they will choose to add some harmonious elements to modern rooms, so as to get modern rooms. First of all, let's take a look at the elements that make up traditional Japanese houses. Tatami is a unique flooring material in Japan, with different sizes in different regions. The intermediary, which we call the living room, is a place where Japanese family members sit together to drink tea, chat and watch TV. It is also called the teahouse. Showa often sees a short round table in the middle, and the family kneels around the round table to eat. The entrance in front of the house is called the porch.

When you enter the porch, you will see the upper frame (porch steps) that separates the porch from the house. In Japanese, guests often say "come up" when visiting, which is related to the porch steps here. The Japanese will take off their shoes here and then enter the room. This step also has the function of blocking the dust and sand outside the house, clearly distinguishing the "outside" and "inside" inside the house, which shows the Japanese habit of cleaning.

Usually it will be located in the reception room. However, the position where you can see the niche completely from the front is called the "upper seat", which is reserved for guests or the head of the family. Sometimes it is used as a corridor or entrance, just like an open deck, allowing free access inside and outside. When the weather is fine, you can also bask in the sun, drink tea and play chess on the balcony. Barrier coating (isolation fan) The barrier and coating are isolation fans in the room. Stick paper that can absorb water on the wooden frame and introduce natural sunlight into the room. Good lighting effect can keep the room bright in rainy or snowy days. At the same time, the partition can freely change the indoor pattern, making the room transparent and open. Push-in wardrobe is a space for storing bedding and other items.

As we all know, in tradition and Japan, bedding is spread on tatami to sleep, and the collected bedding is put in the wardrobe. As an important storage space, the wardrobe has been used up to now and can be seen in many foreign rooms in Japan. Besides bedding, clothes and other items can also be accommodated. In my opinion, there are three main points: the traditional Japanese-style studio house is almost composed of three parts: floor, columns and roof, and it can be said that there is basically no wall. Traditional Japanese houses like to use natural materials, especially wood. For example, the "dry scenery" in the Japanese courtyard. In order to make the host meditate, courtyard design became a stone, sand and trees, not a flowering plant. The spirit of self-discipline and abstinence advocated by Zen Buddhism has been fully reflected in Japanese courtyards.