ca. mid twentieth century
11" x 7" x 7", 28 cm x 18 cm x 18 cm
Six different patterns of hand loomed kasuri or ikat cloth have been stitched together to create this drawstring bag--and what beautiful examples of kasuri weaving they are.
A komebukuro is so named because it was fashioned with an appeal toward the 'fancy.' Dried rice or beans used as offering to a temple during a festival season would be offered to the temple in one of these 'flashy' bags, the rich piecing of cloth being a kind of decoration. (Actually, this bag may not have been used as a komebukuro but more for quotidian functions, but it is of the type that we refer to as komebukuro.)
This bag is a marvelous example of Japanese patchwork, and is still very much able to be used as a bag, as a pillow or simply as a collectible to be admired. It is in very good condition.
Note the discreetly stitched family name shown in an accompanying detail photo.