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Encyclopedia > Kamon

Kamon (家紋) or mon (紋) are Japanese crests. Kamon specifically denotes a family crest whereas mon refers to any crest.

The chrysanthemum (kiku in Japanese) is the coat of arms of the Japanese Emperor.


Japanese crests consist of a rondel encircling a design (feathers, flowers etc). They are somewhat like coats of arms in that they are either associated with a particular family, or an individual who has achieved some variety of public recognition. The designs are usually stylised versions of traditional Japanese themes, such as bamboo. Artists may choose something symbolising their art; a fan design might be chosen by a geisha. A woman may still wear her maiden crests if she wishes and pass them on to her daughters; a woman does not have to adopt her husband's or father's crests. Crests add formality to a kimono. A kimono may have one or three or five crests. . The crests themselves can be more or less formal, the more the crest stands out the more formal it is. This may help dress up or dress down the formality of a kimono at the wearer's discretion.


Related topics

External links

  • Common Japanese crests or mon "Japanese Family Emblem (http://www.familyemblem.com)"
  • Popular kimono themes "The Queen's Kimono (http://www.thequeenskimono.com/pattern.html)"

  Results from FactBites:
 
Mari - diary: Kamon, The beautiful world of Japanese crests. (1665 words)
Kamon specifically denotes a family crest whereas mon refers to any crest.
The Mistuba aoi is the Tokugawa family's kamon.
One is the well know Tokugawa Kamon the other one is the Falcon Feathers (Takanoha) Kamon.
Kamon (501 words)
I kimono più formali hanno, dipinti o ricamati in punti ben visibili, degli stemmi di famiglia, i kamon (ka= famiglia, mon = stemma) o semplicemente mon.
Il kamon viene anche dipinto su furoshiki, fukusa, oggetti cerimoniali.
La combinazione di numero e "grado" dei kamon permette di modulare finemente la formalità di un kimono.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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