Tatami
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Six-mat room with tatami flooring and shoji. |
(originally meaning "folded and piled")
mats are a traditional
Japanese flooring. Made of woven
straw, and traditionally packed with straw (though nowadays sometimes with
styrofoam), tatami are made in individual mats of uniform size and shape, bordered by brocade or plain green cloth.
Tatami were originally a luxury item for the wealthy at a time when most people had floors made of dirt.
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Typical layout of a 4 1/2 mat room |
There are various rules concerning the number and layout of tatami mats; an inauspicious layout is said to bring bad fortune. In homes, the mats must not be laid in a grid pattern, and in any layout there is never a point where the corners of three or four mats intersect.
In Japan, the size of a room is typically measured by the number of
tatami mats (-畳
-jō). The traditional dimensions of the mats were fixed at 90 cm by 180 cm (1.62
square meters) by 5 cm (35.5
in by 71 in by 2 in). Half mats, 90 cm by 90 cm (35.5 in by 35.5 in) are also made. Shops were traditionally designed to be 5½ mats (8.91m²), and
tea rooms and tea houses are frequently 4½ mats (7.29m²). Because the size is fixed, rooms in traditional Japanese construction measure in multiples of 90 cm. Mats from
Kyoto and other parts of western Japan are slightly smaller than those from
Tokyo and eastern Japan at 85 cm by 170 cm (1.53m²; 33.5 in by 70.5 in).
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Typical layout of a 4 1/2-mat tea room. |
Tatami mats are associated with Japanese religious rites and the
tea ceremony. Most modern Japanese homes still have at least one tatami room, the
washitsu.
Tatami are also used when training Japanese
martial arts, such as
judo, for protective purposes.
Tatami "omote", or the outside rush mat layer, wrapped over the rice straw core of the mat, is used in the practice of
tameshigiri in Japanese swordsmanship. The tatami omote mats are rolled into cylinders, soaked in water for several days, and then cut in order to test either a newly made sword's sharpness or a swordsman's cutting ability.
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1 E0 m² |
Men Making Tatami Mats, late 1800s. |
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Tatami Mats The Japanese Shoji & Tatami Company
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Traditional Tatami Mats Tatami Mats in Canada