Kotoseiya Yuichi 3 Posted June 26, 2002 I browsed through the kyokai's banzuke pages and noticed that some of the pictures were updated. Few guys seem to be wearing a new kesho-mawashi on their official kyokai portraits while others (those with few basho under their belts in juryo) are now seen wearing kesho for the first time. Here they are in alphabetical order: Juzan in a cartoonish one. Kasuganishiki's very tasteful heron kesho. Shimotori in a replica of his do-beya Tokitsuumi's kesho; apparently from the same college or university. Takamisakari in a new... how shall I put this... strange design. Takanotsuru wears bright yellow which seems to be in vogue. Tamarikido's simple and yellow one. Tochinonada's gone from blue to red. It suits him! Ushiomaru in excessively canary bird yellow! Uh... :-0 Which one do you prefer? I think Kasuganishiki's kesho is very elegant. (Thumbs up...) Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Yubiquitoyama 4 Posted June 26, 2002 Regarding Takamisakari: What has gotten into someone? A slightly misaimed way of trying to get people focusing less on his Robocop anthics Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Kotoseiya Yuichi 3 Posted June 27, 2002 Seriously, I don't care whether the Svastika is not originally a Nazi invention, or even if it's not in the same clock direction (which I don't know really). In my opinion, that is one strange choice of kesho-mawashi motive... I sure would have picked something else... Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Kotoseiya Yuichi 3 Posted October 28, 2002 Digging up this old thread despite my own recommendations as I feel this didn't deserve a thread of its own. There seems to be two new makuuchi portraits, viz. Hokutoriki & Iwakiyama who spent too long a time in his regular mawashi on kyokai's pages. First Hokutoriki in his landscape themed kesho. Then Iwakiyama in his bride-like white kesho. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Itachi 378 Posted November 5, 2002 As for Takamisakari's kesho-mawashi, the swastika-like symbol is the same one used to indicate a temple (buddhist) on a Japanese map. Takami-zeki is from Aomori-ken and probably the Hirosaki area (since the bottom of his kesho reads Hirosaki something or other) and Hirosaki has a large number of temples for such a small city. It is a castle town and was a bit of a refuge for many samurai families from Kyoto during one of the many battles that were fought centuries ago for control of the old capital. Takamisakari's design seems to be very fitting for a rikishi from that area. The kanji imposed over top of the swastika are the Hiro from Hirosaki and it looks like ..mi for beautiful. I may not have all the details correct but that is the jist of it anyway. He's showing pride in his hometown. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Zenjimoto 40 Posted November 5, 2002 My thumbs up to Hokutoriki for his classic beautiful design (very tasteful and great color palette) and Ushiomaru, definitely the life of the party in canary yellow :) Tamarikido's I find awful - at least the Universities could sticj to using their traditional insignia rather than poorly placed romaji... :) Iwakiyama in white really looks a bit bizarre! Hey, they never wash mawashi... so just how long you think this one will stay white?? ;) Cheers Zenjimoto Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Kotoseiya Yuichi 3 Posted November 6, 2002 Hey, they never wash mawashi... so just how long you think this one will stay white?? ;) They never wash shimekomi, the one used in bouts. I think they do wash kesho-mawashi if needed. How is silk washed anyway? I bet it's not just thrown into a washing machine! :-D Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Kotoseiya Yuichi 3 Posted March 4, 2003 Once again digging up an old thread despite my own recommendations for not doing do. I found only three new official portraits this time. First Takekaze with a kesho from a university (?). Does someone know which one? Then Asasekiryu. Very much like Asashoryu's old kesho! Just different colour, predictably red instead of blue. And finally Asashoryu's new portrait with the tsuna. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Doitsuyama 1,170 Posted March 4, 2003 First Takekaze with a kesho from a university (?). Does someone know which one? The writing on the bottom of the kesho sayz it all :-) : chūō daigaku kōenkai. chūō literally means central by the way. English homepage of chūō university Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Yoavoshimaru 0 Posted March 4, 2003 Juzan in a cartoonish one. Once again I apologize for my rudimentary Japanese reading abilities -- can someone please translate what the letters on the bottom of his keshomawashi say? TIA. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Doitsuyama 1,170 Posted March 4, 2003 Why do you want to know this? The kanji are somewhat difficult to read for me. The first looks like Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Yoavoshimaru 0 Posted March 4, 2003 Because I have boundless curiosity :-P Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Kotoseiya Yuichi 3 Posted April 28, 2003 This time there seems to be only one new kesho shown on kyokai's pages, viz. that of Sumanofuji. I think I read somewhere a long time ago that his shikona consisting of five kanji (or is the middle one a katakana?) is the first so long after Chiyonofuji who also had a five-kanji shikona. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Yubiquitoyama 4 Posted April 28, 2003 I appreciate you adding the new kesho-mawashi, and Sumanofuji's is quite nice, but it did actually get up on the NSK already before the Kyushu 2002 tournament... PS. Thanks for the shikona added to my avatar! (Punk rocker...) PSPS. It's fully possible the ice hockey players actually DO live in that hotel you mentioned, so I suggest you stalk Forsberg as soon as possible. :-D The only info I have found though is that the players hotel lies in the outskirts of Turku. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Zenjimoto 40 Posted April 28, 2003 This time there seems to be only one new kesho shown on kyokai's pages, viz. that of Sumanofuji. I think I read somewhere a long time ago that his shikona consisting of five kanji (or is the middle one a katakana?) is the first so long after Chiyonofuji who also had a five-kanji shikona. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest Tachiyama Posted April 28, 2003 Why do you want to know this? The kanji are somewhat difficult to read for me. The first looks like Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Yoavoshimaru 0 Posted April 28, 2003 This time there seems to be only one new kesho shown on kyokai's pages So do you actually go through the kyokai page for every single sekitori looking for new kesho-mawashi, before every basho? This must require a lot of time... Or is there an easier way? :-D Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Kotoseiya Yuichi 3 Posted April 28, 2003 So do you actually go through the kyokai page for every single sekitori looking for new kesho-mawashi, before every basho? This must require a lot of time... Or is there an easier way? (Blowing up furiously...) Yes. All I have is surplus time. (Applauding...) Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Amanogawa 77 Posted April 29, 2003 (edited) Wow! I never expected to see the name of Hirosaki here in this international forum! (Blowing up furiously...) This is another geeky stuff, so skip this post if you're not. (Applauding...) Itachi-zeki is right, Edited April 29, 2003 by Amanogawa Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Manekineko 200 Posted April 29, 2003 This is another geeky stuff, so skip this post if you're not. :-/ [...] Of course each and every family also has its own family emblem up to this present day, like ones you see in http://www8.plala.or.jp/biree11/tokusen.htm Thank you from a Japanophile and geek! (Heart) That link is great! (Applauding...) Btw, Japan's every local government has its own emblem - is this common in many nations? In Croatia, counties have their coat-of-arms and flags, and cities have their coat-of-arms... mostly traditional, or from past feudal families that ruled most of the county or owned most of the town. If you look at our national flag, you'll see that it has five small coat-of-arms on top of the checkered one, representing five main parts of our country: central Croatia, city-state Dubrovnik, Dalmatia, Istria and Slavonia... Slovenian coat-of-arms has three stars (eblem of once powerful noble family - Counts of Celje) above Triglav, their highest mountain. (Blowing up furiously...) , I know... :-( Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Kotoseiya Yuichi 3 Posted April 29, 2003 Of course each and every family also has its own family emblem up to this present day, like ones you see in http://www8.plala.or.jp/biree11/tokusen.htm These are the hanko, right? Used where a Western person would write a signature? Do Japanese carry those with them as they would carry, say, a pen? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Kotoseiya Yuichi 3 Posted April 29, 2003 In Croatia, counties have their coat-of-arms and flags, and cities have their coat-of-arms... Same in Finland. Every province, county, town and municipality has its own coat of arms. For example this one's that of Lieto, my home municipality. He's Peter holding the keys to heaven. (Blowing up furiously...) Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Amanogawa 77 Posted April 30, 2003 QUOTE Of course each and every family also has its own family emblem up to this present day, like ones you see in http://www8.plala.or.jp/biree11/tokusen.htm These are the hanko, right? Used where a Western person would write a signature? Do Japanese carry those with them as they would carry, say, a pen? Well, they are not hanko ( but you do know we have "hanko"!! (Yikes...) ) These patterns are called "kamon ( ka Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Kotoseiya Yuichi 3 Posted April 30, 2003 These patterns are called kamon. D'oh! As soon as I see kamon written, I realize I've been mixing two words again. Kamon are the (two?) round symbols woven onto a sekitori's montsuki, right? Let's see if I can find an image. (I managed to turn this back to sumo, didn't I? :-) ) Share this post Link to post Share on other sites