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Yatate (Portable Writing Set)

You might have noticed that I’ve been a little negligent in my posts lately. So I figured it was about time to get the ball rolling again, and what could be better than a nice Yatate to give that ball a push. Unfortunately, as crafty as the Japanese are, there is no digital version yet available; so I must use my QWERTY keyboard to write this post. I hope you don’t mind.

yatate1 300x225 Yatate (Portable Writing Set)
yatate2 300x225 Yatate (Portable Writing Set)
Traditionally, writing utensuls were separate items, and preparation was a timely process,. You had your brush (fude), and an ink stick (sumi) which you ground upon your ink stone (suzuri) till you got the right consistency. But during the Kamakura era (1185-1333), things changed. Someone figured out that if you put some cotton in a box (sumi tsubo) you could keep wet ink around, like the Western inkwell. Someone also decided that if you made the box longer, you could also store some brushes. Over time the design was modified, the ink box got deeper and the brush area narrowed, giving birth to the Yatate (which also later metamorphed into various forms). Depicted above is the most common form which could simply be stuffed into the obi (sash) for transport.

As a craftsman, I came to know about Yatate because I had the woodworking version, known simply as Sumitsubo. Consisting of an inkwell attached to a spool of string with a pin on the end. You pull the string through the inkwell, attach the pin to the end of a piece of wood and stretch the string across to the other end. With a little tug you snap the string and create a line on your workpiece. Thus you have the Japanese equivalent of the Western chalk line, depicted below. Cool huh?

sumitsubo 300x225 Yatate (Portable Writing Set)

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