Danbooru
Login Posts Comments Notes Artists Tags Pools Wiki Forum More » Listing Upload Hot Changes Help
A list of tags to help categorize this search. Space delimited.

Search

Blacklisted (help)

  • guro
  • scat
  • furry -rating:g
Disable all Re-enable all

Tags

  • ? dairi 4.2k
  • ? shingyoku (touhou) 266
  • ? shingyoku (male) 201
  • ? hat 1.3M
  • ? japanese clothes 428k
  • ? tate eboshi 12k
  • ? 1boy 1.6M
  • ? alphes (style) 3.1k
  • ? black hair 1.7M
  • ? black hat 151k
  • ? black sandals 10k
  • ? blue pants 40k
  • ? full body 930k
  • ? holding own arm 7.4k
  • ? kimono 265k
  • ? long sleeves 1.8M
  • ? pants 496k
  • ? parody 84k
  • ? profile 143k
  • ? sandals 111k
  • ? short hair 2.5M
  • ? simple background 2.1M
  • ? standing 1.0M
  • ? highres 6.0M
  • ? large variant set 31k

Options

Related

  • Deleted
  • Random
  • History
  • Discussions
  • Count
  • Posts Wiki Search »
  • Size
    • Small
    • Medium
    • Large
    • Huge
    • Huge
    • Gigantic
    • Absurd
    • Show scores
  • Edit

    立烏帽子 烏帽子 冠

    A tate-eboshi (立烏帽子, lit. "standing eboshi cap") is a tall, straight hat worn by Japanese male aristocrats since the Heian Period. Afterwards, various types of eboshi were born, e.g. Kazaori eboshi (Samurai eboshi), Okina eboshi, etc. Tate eboshi is the best-known one. This headdress came about in the Heian period based on headgear known as a hashiha-kouburi (圭冠).

    Kanmuri are official hats worn in the imperial court and eboshi are casual headdresses worn by the nobility and it was also worn by the normal people. The Mikado never uses an eboshi. Danbooru currently does not distinguish eboshi from ancient Japanese kanmuri (冠).

    Physically, the kanmuri stands out thanks to the "koji (巾子)", a cylindrical shape that stands upright from the top of the headwear, and the "ei (纓)", string-shaped cloth which hangs down from the rear of the headwear towards the wearer's back. The Japanese at the time when kanmuri were still simple sack-like shapes had a topknot on their head. They wore kanmuri by putting the topknot through a tube and binding the root of the topknot wearing this sack and letting the rest of the string hang down their backs. The terms "koji" and "ei", which were used even when the shape and quality of the kanmuri changed, serve as a reminder of this older form.

    Notably worn by Mononobe no Futo and Soga no Tojiko of the Touhou series.

    See also

    • hina ningyou
    • Tag Group:Attire
    • For a legendary figure, nicknamed "Tate Eboshi", see Suzuka Gozen.

    External links

    • Noh Terminology: 'Eboshi'
    • Tangorin
    • Wikimedia Commons

    This tag implicates hat (learn more).

    View wiki

    post #9497117
    post #9494184
    post #9494183
    post #9494182
    post #9494181
    post #9494180
    post #9494179
    post #9494178
    post #9494177
    post #9494176
    post #9494175
    post #9494174
    post #9494162
    post #9494161
    post #9494160
    post #9494159
    post #9494158
    post #9494157
    post #9494156
    post #9494155
    1 2 3 4 5
    Terms / Privacy / Upgrade / Contact /