Comb thumbnail 1
Comb thumbnail 2
Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
Japan, Room 45, The Toshiba Gallery

Comb

ca. 1900 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This Japanese hair comb was used by a woman as a decorative hair ornament in a hairstyle that was put up. It is a pair with the hairpin (FE.28-2002), both of which are decorated with pines and ivy.

Over the centuries, hairstyles and hair ornaments underwent considerable transformation in Japan. From roughly the twelfth to the late sixteenth centuries, it was customary for women to wear their hair long and loose without ornamentation. Thereafter hair was put up with increasingly elaborate hair ornaments. At first hair ornaments were mostly confined to women of the elite but, from the mid eighteenth century onwards, they were increasingly available to all strata of society. During the Edo period (1615-1868), women used a wide variety of combs (kushi), bodkins or hairpins (kanzashi) and hairpins (kogai) in a wide range of materials, such as wood, ivory and tortoiseshell, which were most commonly decorated with lacquer. Not only did the hairstyle and its ornaments reflect the age, social class and marital status of the woman, but the hair ornaments also reflected the individual’s taste.


Object details

Object type
Brief description
Hair comb, tortoiseshell with black, gold, green and red lacquer, decorated with pine and ivy, Japanese, c.1900
Credit line
Given by Fumie Kosuge
Summary
This Japanese hair comb was used by a woman as a decorative hair ornament in a hairstyle that was put up. It is a pair with the hairpin (FE.28-2002), both of which are decorated with pines and ivy.

Over the centuries, hairstyles and hair ornaments underwent considerable transformation in Japan. From roughly the twelfth to the late sixteenth centuries, it was customary for women to wear their hair long and loose without ornamentation. Thereafter hair was put up with increasingly elaborate hair ornaments. At first hair ornaments were mostly confined to women of the elite but, from the mid eighteenth century onwards, they were increasingly available to all strata of society. During the Edo period (1615-1868), women used a wide variety of combs (kushi), bodkins or hairpins (kanzashi) and hairpins (kogai) in a wide range of materials, such as wood, ivory and tortoiseshell, which were most commonly decorated with lacquer. Not only did the hairstyle and its ornaments reflect the age, social class and marital status of the woman, but the hair ornaments also reflected the individual’s taste.
Associated object
Collection
Accession number
FE.29-2002

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Record createdDecember 14, 2005
Record URL
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