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Japan 2013

(2) As I sifted through the beautiful hand-painted and embroidered silks she told me about how, many years ago, she would sometimes buy, sell or repair kimono from the Okiya (the geisha houses in the Gion District of Kyoto), but hadn’t for many years. The numbers of geisha in Japan have fallen from 80,000 in the 1920s to as few as 1000 practicing today, and it is seen as a dying art.

JAPAN | Thursday, 4 July 2013 | Views [509] | View Smaller Image

(2) As I sifted through the beautiful hand-painted and embroidered silks she told me about how, many years ago, she would sometimes buy, sell or repair kimono from the Okiya (the geisha houses in the Gion District of Kyoto), but hadn’t for many years. The numbers of geisha in Japan have fallen from 80,000 in the 1920s to as few as 1000 practicing today, and it is seen as a dying art.

 

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