The east asian architecture tag is very broad and does little to help find this sort of lattice specifically. I suspect that panels of this style might also be found in images where architecture tags would be inappropriate (in furniture, for instance).
i don't think we have an existing tag for those. however, googling for chinese lattices generated interesting results. chinese terms like 花格窗 and 格子门 and japanese terms 格子戸, 格子, and 組子 relate to the design.
post #2293841 1. The human-sharped paper. I keep forgetting this tag. 2. The floating lantern. There's sky lantern tag so I wonder if these afloat laterns have their own tag or not.
post #2293841 1. The human-sharped paper. I keep forgetting this tag. 2. The floating lantern. There's sky lantern tag so I wonder if these afloat laterns have their own tag or not.
the post was titled 流し雛 nagashibina (related to the date today). didn't notice but someone used the nagashi-bina tag before.
Yeah, but the result what I get when i get is a festival. They are not the lanterns. "Nagashi-bina is an event that involves dispelling impurities and misfortunes by floating dolls away on water." (First source on twitter). But regarding the lanterns...floating water lantern (pretty straight forward) was the best I could find...
Go through some asian festival wikis: ~ There're lots of festivals, ceremonies do this floaty thing, some mixing with sky lantern too. ~ And it's not just paper lantern, look like there're other floating stuffs too ( flowers, decorated baskets, mini paper box with candle, anything with or without light could float on water... though there's only paper latern fanart around )
Well, I think afloat should do it for now. (I thought afloat only apply to living thing, not objects,, silly me)
Go through some asian festival wikis: ~ There're lots of festivals, ceremonies do this floaty thing, some mixing with sky lantern too. ~ And it's not just paper lantern, look like there're other floating stuffs too ( flowers, decorated baskets, mini paper box with candle, anything with or without light could float on water... though there's only paper latern fanart around )
Well, I think afloat should do it for now. (I thought afloat only apply to living thing, not objects,, silly me)
Thank you all for your suggestion.
Well, the wiki page of afloat is pretty much about living beings, especially humans or human-like characters (like androids) and for an non-native speaker, this can be read that non-living objects are excluded. Maybe a more precise entry would be good?
After a brief review, I think many people got confused for the usage of cuffs, handcuffs, and shackles tags (myself included). So let's make this clear:
1.Shackles are used when the existence of chains linked with someone's hands are confirmed. 2.Handcuffs are strictly used for any police-related cuffs model. 3.Cuffs are the general term for any type of cuffs (handcuffs, wrist_cuffs etc.)
Need confirmation here. Many pics of Kasen, Yuugi, and Suika were tagged as handcuffs in one pic, then shackles in another.
Logically they should be, for they share a trait as "A band typically of leather and/or metal that fits around the wrist, arms, legs, or ankles of a person", like the cuffs wiki said.
The touhou oni have shackles, not handcuffs. Usually with a piece of chain.
But aren't handcuffs a type of shackles if I read the Wikipedia entry of shackle? "The term also applies to handcuffs and other similarly conceived restraint devices that function in a similar manner." I don't know this since the english language has here a much wide usage of these words so I'm just interested.
To be honest, the exact definition of ankle_cuffs or wrist_cuffs in Danbooru isn't clear enough. For example, people might add the ankle_cuffs & wrist_cuffs tags when they see a pic of somebody with shackles in his/her hands and legs. Although wrist_cuffs is more easily distinguishable due to frequently used on pics with bunny_girl tag.