Gifu: A place in our hearts
Moving image: Explore cultures and art making around the world
Moving image: Explore cultures and art making around the world
Creative cowboy films would like to thank Narihiro Muto, Bryan Takano, Nahoko Furuta, Katsunari Ikedo, Maki Ito, Ayami Kuroki, Mari Yamada, Kazuhiro Yoshida, Sumii Kazunari, Hisashi Inoue, Hidetaka Furukawa, Takako Naruse, Kazuma Imagawa, Yukiyo Terada, Hidehiko Ozawa, Hiroki Tamai, Reiko Sasaki, Erico Arisu, Tatsuo Nabata, Tatsuya Takashima, John Wolseley. Calligraphy Akie Tsuzuku. Music Keigo Tanaka, Arico and Gumi.
Our special thanks to the Gifu Prefectural Government and the people, communities and businesses of Gifu.
Filmed in Gifu in the following locations: Gifu City, Mino City, Seki City, Tajimi City, Nakatsugawa City, Gero City, Shirakawa Mura and Takayama City.
Any unauthorised copying, editing, exhibition, renting, exchange, hiring, lending, public performances, diffusion or broadcasting of this film are all prohibited without the permission of Creative cowboy films and the Gifu Prefectural Government.
The Japanese summer of 2019 and we take you on a journey around Gifu, the beautiful and mountainous prefecture in Central Honshu.
As part of our work in Japan we encourage visitors to not only travel to the most famous and visited places, but to also explore and to discover another Japan, away from the best known places.
In this way the traveller will enter a land of endless discoveries.
Hon-minoshi, designated an important intangible cultural property, is rare, making up about ten per cent of Mino washi production. It is the highest in the order of paper making, made from the bark of Mulberry trees using traditional hand methods, bleaching is not allowed and never contemplated. Hon-minoshi making is an art that is at one with nature, the paper’s intertwined fibres reflecting the way of the world. Hon-minoshi is of clean and sparkling rivers and of ancient traditions.
I am the third generation for this bamboo craft and I have been involved since the time of my grandfather.
The chrysanthemum design is more traditional and that already existed in Kyoto, but this plum flower design pattern is my original idea.