Central

Kyoto Living Craft House Mumeisha

Highlight
A beautifully embroidered and dyed kimono from the Edo period

A chance to see the daily life a Kyoto merchant

Standing in the city’s clothing quarter of “Muromachi”, this merchant’s machiya townhouse, from a century ago, has living quarters slotted between front-room shop and inner courtyard garden that leads to magnificent storehouses, all connected by a passageway from front to back. The merchant family that resided here handled white crepe for kimonos.
The “living” museum exhibits numerous furnishings and clothing. Notably, there is a collection of kimonos in various styles and rugs from the early Edo period. In addition, another feature is the collection of cotton prints from overseas. And, with the seasons, the house takes on different guises to deal with extremes of weather - so, for example, in summer, the living quarters are tuned to the season with rattan blinds and reed screens to keep the sun’s glare at bay and let the cool breezes enter. Also, during the Gion Festival, the front latticework is removed to show off the exhibits to people passing by.
Visitors get an excellent idea of how a merchant family lived back in 1909 in a townhouse that Kyoto City has designated as a Scenically Important Structure and the nation has designated as a tangible cultural property.

photo
photo
photo
Address 363 Rokkaku-cho Shinmachi-dori Rokkaku-sagaru, Nakagyo-ku
TEL 075-221-1317
FAX 075-221-1317
Hours 10:00~18:00 (reservation required)
Closed Irregular hols
Adm Adults ¥1,000, High school and college students ¥800, Junior high school students ¥500, Elementary school students ¥300
Access A 10-min walk from Exit 6 of the Subway Karasuma Line and Tozai Line Karasuma Oike Stn/A 10-min walk from Karasuma-Sanjo Stop of City Bus

Facilities near by

photo:Gold Leaf Art Studio

Gold Leaf Art Studio

Traditional gold leaf technology and contemporary modern art

photo:Nishikawa Abura-ten

Nishikawa Abura-ten

The precious tools that were once used to extract rape-seed oil

photo:Citizen’s Disaster Prevention Center

Citizen’s Disaster Prevention Center

A chance to use all your senses in disaster prevention training

photo:Somé Seiryukan

Somé Seiryukan

A place where the artistic world of dyeing unfolds

error: Content is protected !!