In Japanese mythology, a household item will acquire a soul once it has existed for 100 years, becoming a type of yokai called a tsukumogami. One of the more well-known tsukumogami is the karakasa-obake, which is born from a paper parasol. Behind it is a liveing paper lantern called a chochin-obake and a pair of animated sandals called bake-zori.
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japanese folklore, japanese, parasol, karakasa, yokai
Matryoshka: Set of Russian dolls of decreasing size placed one inside another
Daruma Doll: Japanese lucky doll. Paint one eye when asking for a whish, paint the other one when is fulfilled. Oh, and these are zombies! Bodhidharma himself came from the undead!
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art, chinese lucky cat, lucky charm, amulet, three
Undead Japanese traditional female entertainer called Geisha or Maiko, with a western vintage retro look and red skin colors with bones with three eyes.
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undead, japanese undead, japanese, samurai, samurai warrior
Green Sparkling Hotei Buddha is a fresh buddha with the beverage you like the most. Hotei is one of the 7 Lucky Monks inside Japanese Mythology. This one carries a bag in which he gathers stuff from the road. Is often placed in money bags to attract more money.
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tokebi, inspirational mandarin, chinese, korean, nirvana