Danbooru
Login Posts Comments Notes Artists Tags Pools Wiki Forum More »
Listing Upload Hot Changes Help
A list of tags to help categorize this search. Space delimited.

Search

  • Help
guro
scat
furry -rating:g

Tags

  • ? touhou 1.1M
  • ? konpaku youmu 39k
  • ? saigyouji yuyuko 27k
  • ? konpaku youmu (ghost) 22k
  • ? mint fantome 2.1k
  • ? mint fantome (minto 2.0) 781
  • ? shitodo kuroji 679
  • ? shion (len'en) 224
  • ? triangular headpiece 21k
  • ? hitodama 19k
  • ? mob cap 100k
  • ? frilled kimono 7.2k
  • ? blue kimono 37k
  • ? saigyouji yuyuko's fan design 515
  • ? sleeve garter 4.7k
  • ? ghost 35k
  • ? blue hat 76k
  • ? folding fan 26k
  • ? hand fan 57k
  • ? japanese clothes 507k
  • ? pink hair 993k
  • ? kimono 324k
  • ? pink eyes 401k
  • ? hat 1.6M
  • ? butterfly 72k

Options

Related

  • Deleted
  • Random
  • History
  • Discussions
  • Count
  • Posts Wiki Search »
  • Size
    • Small
    • Medium
    • Large
    • Huge
    • Huge
    • Gigantic
    • Absurd
    • Show scores
  • Edit

    三角頭巾
    • Pixiv
    • Twitter
    • Bluesky
    • Weibo
    • Lofter
    • Tumblr
    額烏帽子
    • Pixiv
    • Twitter
    • Bluesky
    • Weibo
    • Lofter
    • Tumblr
    額隠し
    • Pixiv
    • Twitter
    • Bluesky
    • Weibo
    • Lofter
    • Tumblr

    A type of headband sometimes worn by ghosts in Japanese folklore.

    Derived from Edo period burial rituals, it was originally intended to protect the newly deceased from evil spirits. It has various regional names—hitai-eboshi (額烏帽子, lit. "forehead headpiece"), tenkan (天冠), houkan ("diadem", only Buddhists use this word), kami-kaburi, kami-kakushi (髪隠し, lit. "hair-hider"), zukin (頭巾, lit. "hood" and also used as a generic term), and so on.

    The triangle cloth on the head of Japanese ghosts, known as a tenkan or hitaikakushi, is a piece of traditional funeral attire that serves as part of a white kimono and signals the deceased's status and transition into the spiritual world. While the exact meaning is debated, theories suggest it is a symbol of ascendance to a higher plane, a protective "heaven's crown," or a ward to prevent evil from entering the body, which is why it is found on ghosts like the yūrei.

    Examples

    See also

    • right-over-left kimono
    • shiroshouzoku

    View wiki

    post #691172
    post #690574
    post #690145
    post #690144
    post #689986
    post #689629
    post #689405
    post #688881
    post #688797
    post #688450
    post #687905
    post #687627
    post #687626
    post #687624
    post #687373
    post #687255
    post #686928
    post #686636
    1 910 911 912 913 914 915 916 917 918 1054
    Terms / Privacy / Upgrade / Contact /