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Sakura
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˚✧₊⁎Delivering hand-rubbed postcards, one by one⁎⁺˳✧༚ This is a postcard set featuring the 24 solar terms. Each of the 24 cards has "food" as its theme, with a touch of humor. Spring Risshun (Beginning of Spring) February 4th: Fuki-no-tou (Butterbur sprouts) (Spring is just around the corner) U-sui (Rain Water) February 19th: Tsubaki-mochi (Camellia rice cakes) (To the shining mochi) Keichitsu (Awakening of Insects) March 5th: Hina-arare (Colored rice crackers) (Also the appearance of arare) Shunbun (Vernal Equinox) March 20th: Botamochi (Rice cakes) (Botamochi from a box) Seimei (Pure Brightness) April 5th: Hanami Dango (Cherry blossom viewing dumplings) (Black cat dumplings) Kokuu (Grain Rain) April 20th: Bamboo shoot in a bamboo grove (Bamboo shoots after the rain) Summer Rikka (Beginning of Summer) May 5th: Kashiwa-mochi (Oak leaf rice cakes) (Kashiwa-mochi drawn in a picture) Shouman (Grain Full) May 21st: Umeshu (Plum wine) (Plums drowning in sake) Boushu (Grain in Ear) June 6th: French bread (June bread) Geshi (Summer Solstice) June 21st: Minazuki and Matcha (Summer adzuki bean triangles) Shousho (Minor Heat) July 7th: Grilled Ayu (Sweetfish) (Sending grilled fish to the enemy) Taisho (Major Heat) July 23rd: Goya Chanpuru (Bitter melon stir-fry) (The taste of a bitter man) Autumn Risshu (Beginning of Autumn) August 7th: Warabi-mochi (Bracken rice cake) (Summer is over, autumn has come) Shosho (Limit of Heat) August 23rd: Grapes and Wine (Angry grapes) Hakuro (White Dew) September 7th: Three kinds of Japanese pears and a keyboard (Three small pieces shaped like pears) Shuubun (Autumnal Equinox) September 23rd: Tsukimi Soba (Moon-viewing buckwheat noodles) (Tsukimi soba, so many things make me sad) Kanro (Cold Dew) October 8th: Chestnut rice (Picking chestnuts from the rice) Soukou (Frost Descent) October 23rd: Ginkgo leaf skewers (Ginkgo nuts) Winter Ritto (Beginning of Winter) November 7th: Red-leaved Japanese dogwood and Inoko-mochi (Wild boar child rice cakes) (Opening the hearth) Shouetsu (Minor Snow) November 22nd: Dried persimmons (Beyond the persimmons) Taisetsu (Major Snow) December 7th: Kabura (Turnip) from above (A turnip without roots or leaves) Touji (Winter Solstice) December 22nd: Yuzu bath (Fragrant yuzu) Shoukan (Minor Cold) January 5th: Kanazawa wagashi (Japanese sweets) - Fukuume (Lucky plum) (Laughing gate brings fortune plum) Daikan (Major Cold) January 20th: Roasted sweet potato (Purple-smelling potato) (The dates attached to each solar term are for 2025-2026) All designs and color schemes are original works. Size: 14.8 x 10 cm (with postal code box, Inshu Washi "Yamaneko Hagaki") Each card is stamped with a self-made seal (tenkoku) representing each solar term. Each card is hand-rubbed, so each has a different flavor. These postcards are fun for seasonal correspondence or collecting and displaying. *Because they are hand-rubbed, the color may differ from the photo, and there may be minor stains or smudges. *Please refrain from price negotiations as these are handmade items.
2 weeks ago