Silvery blue hues for this antique outfit, pairing a fresh kimono pattern with fuji (wisteria) and discreet sakura (cherry blossoms), with a nure-tsubame (swallows in the rain) summer weave obi
"Drifting Home" written and directed by Hiroyasu Ishida, co-written with Hayashi Mori
Type: Movie
Aired: September 16, 2022
Season: Fall 2022
Studio: Studio Colorido
Duration: 120 minutes (2 hours)
Genre: Drama, Fantasy, Adventure, Comedy, Coming of Age
Summary:
Kousuke and Natsume have been friends since childhood, but as time goes on, the relationship between the two sixth graders seems strained as they keep avoiding each other for a reason.
One day during the summer vacation, they visit a housing complex that is scheduled to be demolished. Having grown up there, the place holds a lot of memories, but while playing, they suddenly get caught up in a mysterious phenomenon. When they regain consciousness, they see an entire ocean before them as the housing complex has drifted into a mysterious sea with Kousuke, Natsume, and others in it. Will they be able to return to their previous world? A summer farewell journey begins...
I cried very well. There was a moment in the movie where I thought "I will never be loved nor hugged like that." Lol
Flower fields at a farm outside of Furano, Hokkaido, Japan ~ 2021
I rarely go on guided tours, but since I didn't have a car for one of the last trips I took before leaving Japan, I thought a bus tour for the day would be a good way to maximize what I could see with the limited time that I had. Ideally, you'd rent a car and go at your own pace, but by that time the permit I had gotten for renting a car had expired. It's meant for short-term tourism, not long-time living. I would have had to convert my license to a Japanese one. I was thinking of doing so, but the process is really convoluted for Americans (unless you have a Washington State driving license for some reason...). So, I didn't. However, I thought this bus tour was good value and I saw a lot of beautiful places I wouldn't have seen otherwise or thought to see, such as these flower fields. Gorgeous.
Sleek pastels for this antique outfit, pairing chic fuji (wisteria) black obi, with a romantic sandwaves-patterned kimono (probably depicting a karesansui Japanese "zen" garden)
Back to my hydrangea path! I thought I’d missed it this year because my neighborhood ‘drangees are dried up, but I didn’t account for how much shade this area gets!