Japanese Gift-Wrapping and Furoshiki

100
rate or flag this page
Facebook

By relache

It's NOT Just Inside That Counts

When it comes to Japanese gifts, it's not the inside that really counts. Gift-wrapping, called tsutsumi, is the most important part of the gift-giving it seems. How you wrap and tie the package is considered especially symbolic and carries a lot of expression about how you feels towards the person and the gesture of giving them a gift.

The wrapping around the gift is seen as being part of the entire gift experience, with the opening and revealing of the contents viewed as one complete experience. In Western culture, gift-wrapping seems mostly just meant to conceal the gift, with unwrapping often being very perfunctory or even crude. Japanese gifts are aestheic and beautiful on the outside, with the same full expression of the culture's love of balance, nature, novelty and simplicty.

The root of the word tsutsumi is the word that means "to refrain" meaning to be discreet or moderate. Simple but gorgeous paper wrapping, tied with gentle natural fibers or thin ribbons make a bold but beautiful understatement when compared to the flashy papers and big bows found in American forms of wrapping.


An English language explanation of Furoshiki

The History of Furoshiki

One type of wrapping that is uniquely Japanese is the furoshiki. The word itself translates as "bath spread" and is a large piece of cloth that was originally used to carry your clean clothing and bath items to the public bath house. Usage expanded to carrying groceries and other small shopping purchases. Eventually the furoshiki was used for wrapping and transporting wares to market, and in modern times is also employed as a way to wrap and give gifts.

Furoshiki can be made of just about any kind of fabric (cotton, silk, rayon or nylon) and there is no standard size. You get or make your furoshiki as large as you need it to be for whatever you are wrapping and carrying. There are dozens of methods for tying a furoshiki, most of which turn some part of the fabric into a convenient handle for the person doing the carrying.

After World War II, the modern plastic bag began to replace traditional methods of carrying purchases. However with environmental concerns on the rise, using a furoshiki has come back into fashion as it is reusable and eliminates trash.


Make Your Own Furoshiki

It's a lot easier to make your own furoshiki than you think! Really, it can be just about any square or rectangle of cloth. Using a print makes it look much more traditional than using a plain color.

Sew your own - If you are handy with a sewing machine, it's easy to get the right size piece of fabric you need and hem it yourself. You can try your local fabric store, or if you are on a really tight budget, look for fabrics at thrift stores. You never know what you might find that works beautifully.

Find things that work at thrift stores - One of the most common sizes for a furoshiki is about 17" square, which is approximately the same size as the modern Western men's handkerchief. Ladies scarves are also good recycled as a furoshiki. Both of these items can be hunted down for very low-costs at your local thrift stores.


The Wrap Up - comments and feedback

SilkThimble profile image

SilkThimble Level 2 Commenter 2 months ago

Some very good information and useful resources.

HikeGuy profile image

HikeGuy Level 4 Commenter 2 months ago

Lovely. I enjoyed your background and suggestions. This also cuts down on waste from disposable gift wrap.

catherinenbrooks profile image

catherinenbrooks 7 months ago

Wow....Superb.....I like it....thanks

Cyndi10 profile image

Cyndi10 Level 6 Commenter 11 months ago

Wow! That was a great how to. I have a birthday gift to wrap and I love different ways to wrap gifts I present. I will wrap Japanese style today. Thanks so much.

anjali 12 months ago

this so cool. the idea is so great

tpneversaynever profile image

tpneversaynever 12 months ago

Beautiful. I'm very inspired to try this. Thank you!

vandell profile image

vandell 12 months ago

Wow! Thumbs up

deblipp profile image

deblipp Level 1 Commenter 13 months ago

Excellent hub!!!!

The hub which is projected towards presenting the gift is simple fabulous. It is true that, how you wrap and tie the package is considered especially symbolic and carries a lot of expression about how you feels towards the person and the gesture of giving them a gift. Thanks for sharing such a valuable peace of text.

adair_francesca 14 months ago

Great hub. I consider gift wrapping as an art. The designs and the wrapping materials used are wonderful, it adds some beauty as well as increases the excitement of the person who will receive the gift.

Kristine B profile image

Kristine B 14 months ago

How fun!

bletchen 16 months ago

These are really cool. I used to do a bit of origami as a kid, and japanese art has a certain something about it - it's always very intricate and you can see the time that's been put into it - nice hub by the way :-)

HolyLandGifts profile image

HolyLandGifts 16 months ago

very cool :D going to try next holiday :)

CarolMerc profile image

CarolMerc 17 months ago

Looks great! Nice inspiration.

KristenBrockmeyer profile image

KristenBrockmeyer 18 months ago

You could give someone dog kibble as a gift and they'd still be thrilled because of the incredible wrapping! Great article. :)

RoseGardenAdvice profile image

RoseGardenAdvice 18 months ago

Awesome .. Good effort :)

iZeko profile image

iZeko Level 4 Commenter 18 months ago

This is so cool!! I'll have to try it.

jonathan t profile image

jonathan t 18 months ago

My friend loves to wrap gifts! I'm gonna have to share this great hub with her. I'm sure she'll really be into it!!!

Csjun89 profile image

Csjun89 19 months ago

Wow this is an awesome way of wrapping stuff

solar.power profile image

solar.power 20 months ago

Im going to wrap my wifes present using Furoshiki for her wifes birthday. The Japanese are a pretty crafty bunch. Great hub! Voted Up!!!

Submit a Comment
Members and Guests

Sign in or sign up and post using a hubpages account.



    • No HTML is allowed in comments, but URLs will be hyperlinked
    • Comments are not for promoting your Hubs or other sites

    working