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- 'Hiro' Japanese Folktale Pincushion in Mini Lacquered Miso Soup Bowl - Issun-bōshi
'Hiro' Japanese Folktale Pincushion in Mini Lacquered Miso Soup Bowl - Issun-bōshi
Adorable and unique pincushion based on a traditonal Japanese folk tale, Issun-bōshi, 'The Inch Boy'. Made from a miniature, lacquered miso soup bowl, with wave-pattern fabric and 5 tiny handmade pins featuring characters from the tale!
The box comes packaged in a lovely cardboard outer, making it perfect to give as a gift.
The Tale of Issun-bōshi
A childless old couple prayed to the Sumiyoshi sanjin to be blessed with a child, and so they were able to have one. However, the child born was only one sun (around 3 cm or 1.2 in) in height and never grew taller. Thus, the child was named the "one-sun boy" or "Issun-bōshi".
One day, Issun-bōshi said he wanted to go the capital to become a warrior, so he embarked on his voyage with a bowl as a boat, a chopstick as a paddle, a needle as a sword, and a piece of straw as a scabbard. In the capital, he found a splendid big house and found employment there. When a girl of that family went on a journey to visit a palace, an oni kidnapped the girl. As Issun-bōshi attempted to save the girl, the oni swallowed him up. Issun-bōshi used the needle to stab at the oni in the stomach, making the oni surrender, saying "it hurts, stop." The oni spat Issun-bōshi back out before fleeing to the mountains.
Issun-bōshi picked up the magic hammer (Uchide no kozuchi) dropped by the oni and swung it to enlarge his body to a height of six shaku (about 182 cm or 6 ft) and married the girl. It is said that he was able to use that mallet to conjure food, treasures, and other things, and the family was able to prosper for generations.