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A six-matted room and verandah

A six-matted room and verandah.png The seven herbs of autumnThumbnailsA shop in TokyoThe seven herbs of autumnThumbnailsA shop in TokyoThe seven herbs of autumnThumbnailsA shop in TokyoThe seven herbs of autumnThumbnailsA shop in TokyoThe seven herbs of autumnThumbnailsA shop in TokyoThe seven herbs of autumnThumbnailsA shop in Tokyo
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A Japanese room is measured, not by feet and inches, but by the number of mats it contains. A mat consists of a straw mattress, about an inch and a half thick, with a covering of fine matting which is sewn on at the edges of the mattress either by itself or with a border, usually dark-blue and an inch wide, of coarse hempen cloth. It is six feet long by three wide; this measure is not always exact, but may vary by an inch or more in either direction. When a house is newly built, the mat-maker comes to make mats to fit the rooms in it. But in spite of the variation, the size of a room is always given in the number of mats it holds, so that we never know the exact dimensions of a room. The smallest room has two mats, that is, is about six feet square; the next smallest is three-matted, or three yards by two. Four-matted rooms are sometimes to be found; but such rooms are unshapely, being four yards long by two wide. A room with four and a half mats is three yards square and has the half mat, which is a yard square, in the centre. The next size is six-matted, or four yards by three and is followed by the eight-matted, or four yards square.

Author
Home Life in Tokyo
Author: Jukichi Inouye
Published: 1910
Available from gutenberg.org
Dimensions
1036*905
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