Run away! A famous scene from a Grimm's fairy tale, where seven young goats are fleeing a wolf. Notice that they are all wearing kimonos, since the picture is from a Japanese translation published in the late 19c. #ndldigital https://t.co/moOQ4pNrLi https://t.co/vZfNbRV6Xh
An excerpt from the first Japanese translation of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland published in early 20c. The name Alice is render as the Japanese name "Ai-chan." #ndldigital https://t.co/moOQ4pNrLi https://t.co/TTfoSliTEu
This wood-block print depicts the Tomioka seishijo (Tomioka Silk Mill), Japan's oldest silk-reeling factory, which was named a UNECO World Heritage site in 2014. #ndldigital https://t.co/moOQ4pNrLi https://t.co/a5vigREwFe
This book from the Edo period includes illustrations of men and women in colorful costumes. But when you turn the page, you'll find that they are actually kitsune (foxes) and tanuki (raccoon dogs) disguised as humans. #ndldigital https://t.co/moOQ4pNrLi https://t.co/S569FHmhs3
Here are 304 photos taken in Japan by Robert V. Mosier immediately following the end of WWII, which are available in the NDL Digital Collections. Get a glimpse of what postwar Japan looked like in full color. #ndldigital https://t.co/moOQ4pvixa https://t.co/Fzr29pmVtj
This wood-block print depicts the Tomioka seishijo (Tomioka Silk Mill), Japan's oldest silk-reeling factory, which was named a UNECO World Heritage site in 2014. #ndldigital https://t.co/moOQ4pvixa https://t.co/ZJ6Xor9znp
Here are 304 photos taken in Japan by Robert V. Mosier immediately following the end of WWII, which are available in the NDL Digital Collections. Get a glimpse of what postwar Japan looked like in full color. #ndldigital https://t.co/moOQ4pvixa https://t.co/lCtWwBKglE
An excerpt from the first Japanese translation of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland published in early 20c. The name Alice is render as the Japanese name "Ai-chan." #ndldigital https://t.co/moOQ4pvixa https://t.co/0UiLfnNG8O
Run away! A famous scene from a Grimm's fairy tale, where seven young goats are fleeing a wolf. Notice that they are all wearing kimonos, since the picture is from a Japanese translation published in the late 19c. #ndldigital https://t.co/moOQ4pvixa https://t.co/zPofbYuaux
This book from the Edo period includes illustrations of men and women in colorful costumes. But when you turn the page, you'll find that they are actually kitsune (foxes) and tanuki (raccoon dogs) disguised as humans. #ndldigital https://t.co/moOQ4pvixa https://t.co/D72c3MCZG5
An excerpt from the first Japanese translation of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland published in early 20c. The name Alice is render as the Japanese name "Ai-chan." #ndldigital https://t.co/moOQ4pvixa https://t.co/BXQK2NAQfT