Categories
Funny

Japanese Sleeping – 18

Yet another edition of the most popular series on this blog. 18th edition of the Japanese Sleeping photo series!

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This one was captured by Antonio

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This one is not Japanese, Pepinismo knows πŸ˜‰

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Photo by @zordor

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Screen Shot 2012-09-23 at 11.15.25 PM

ε†™ηœŸ 2013-11-22 13 51 10

Other posts of Japanese people sleeping:

Categories
Signs

Musasabi

Strolling around the forests of Karuizawa we bumped into this warning sign… Batman?

musasabi

Musasabi are giant Japanese squirrels that can jump from branch to branch by gliding in the air for up to 100 meters. They are abundant in forests all over Japan and some parts of China. The warning signs are usually found near roads and trails so that people are not surprised if they land on their car. Musasabi live mostly during the night and are rarely seen during the day. Below you can see some Musasabi photos that I’ve found in a blog from Karuizawa

musasabi

musasabi

musasabi

musasabi

flying squirrel in japan

flying squirrel in japan

flying squirrel in japan
Of course, there had to be an arcade that simulates the flights of the Musasabi

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Musasabi remind me a lot of the wingsuit flying humans that are very popular lately.

Categories
Architecture

Yellow Lines

What makes the streets of a place feel distinct from other places? For the people that get to Japan for the first time the change is so radical that almost any element in the environment feels different: lamp posts, hanging power lines, manhole covers, neon advertising, kanjis, the nets to cover the trash that have been ripped by crows… But with the passing of time you get used to everything and it’s difficult to find “flavor” in those small details that make everything. You start feeling like a fish that has never escaped out of the sea. With the passing of time I have lost the sensitivity to the local charms, much more stuff catches my attention walking in the streets outside of Japan than in here.

Even so, I have realized observing my photos that there are some topics that are always there. There are details that I capture repeatedly with my cameras, not getting tired of them, even after many years have passed. One of these obsessions that emerge in my subconscious are the yellow lines that populate the sidewalks and subway stations in Japan.

The yellow lines are used by blind people to find their way around, feeling them with their canes or just by stepping on them. They are also useful to know how close in the platform you can get to the trains. “It is dangerous. Wait behind the yellow line” “危γͺγ„γ§γ™γ‹γ‚‰γ€ι»„θ‰²η·šγΎγ§γŠγ•γŒγ‚Šγγ γ•γ„” – you can hear every time a train is approaching the platform.

yellow lines in tokyo

yellow lines in tokyo

yellow lines in tokyo

yellow lines in tokyo

yellow lines in tokyo

yellow lines in tokyo

yellow lines in tokyo

yellow lines in tokyo

yellow lines in tokyo

yellow lines in tokyo

yellow lines in tokyo

My yellow “art” was present this year at the Tokyo Art Fair thanks to a contribution of artist Yoshiko Brigitte. It was strange for me to see strangers stopping by to contemplate one of those yellow lines that I captured with my camera almost ten years ago under the rain.

yellow lines in tokyo

yellow lines in tokyo

yellow lines in tokyo

yellow lines in tokyo