Welcome to Tajimi, Japan! A humorous greeting from the mayor.
The mayor of Tajimi City explains why you really should visit his city in two minutes. Find out more at
[4K] 2019年多治見花火大会を東鉄バス駅前ロータリーより観覧+東鉄バス花火臨発車風景
2019年8月4日に開催された多治見市花火大会を多治見駅前ロータリーより4Kカメラで撮影しました。
今年も花火大会に合わせて臨時バスが設定され、21時は5台同時発車を見ることができました。
2018年の様子
2017年の様子
2016年の様子(2016年の多治見駅前21時は6台発車でした)
MY WEBSITE
2018年多治見花火大会を東鉄バス駅前ロータリーより観覧+東鉄バス花火臨発車風景
2018年7月29日に開催された多治見市花火大会を多治見駅前ロータリーより4Kカメラで撮影しました。
今年も花火大会に合わせて臨時バスが設定され、21時は5台同時発車を見ることができました。
2017年の様子
2016年の様子(2016年の多治見駅前21時は6台発車でした)
MY WEBSITE
Haso No Sato / Tajimi Camping Place / Gifu-Japan
Very beaultiful place in Japan...
Music: India Time
Music producer: Injection (Israel)
Video producer: Alexander Sasha
TAJIMI - Haso No Sato Camping
Camping Place Haso No Sato
Country-Japan
Province-Gifu
City- Tajimi
You are welcome!!!
Gifu Nagaragawa Fireworks
The Gifu Nagaragawa Fireworks are held on the first Saturday of August in Gifu City, Japan. The fireworks are held along the banks of the famous Nagara River in Gifu City with Mount Kinka and Gifu Castle as a backdrop, the skies above the river are set ablaze with colour.
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Title Music: “Wandering Ronin” by Efrem Scacco
small trip of Minokamo City and Gujo City in Japan.
We couple had a small trip in Japan.
We went to the Minokamo City and Gujo City in Gifu Prefecture near by Nagoya City in Aichi Prefecture.
We enjoyed trip by small trains and cycling by rental electric assisted bikes.
We saw strange and huge tengu figure in shrine, and swarm of swallows.
gifu japan 岐阜県
Takayama is a small city in Gifu prefecture, Japan nicknamed little kyoto by some. Surrounded by the mountains in what we called the Japanese alps, Takayama is a quiet place to live.
Music used: Sunlight by Per Kiilstofte
Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
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MUJI無印良品: [trailer]MUJI+KIDS EARTH FUND+NAKED Inc. in NY「WORLD KID'S FIREWORKS EXHIBITION」
日本やNYでは当たり前の花火。しかし、世界では花火を上げられない国がほとんどです。花火を身近に感じるということ、それは平和であるということです。花火の絵をデジタルにして打ち上げる「FIREWORKS BY NAKED」というデジタルアートコレクションを持つNAKED Inc.が、子供地球基金の活動に共鳴し、MUJI Fifth Avenueの店内に花火を打ち上げます。
The exhibition, entitled Kids Earth Project, will feature artwork created by children around the world curated by the Kids Earth Fund. There will also be a digital display of illustrations created by New York City-based kids ages 5-12 during a MUJI-sponsored workshop held at the Fifth Avenue flagship store. These pieces display a sense of purity and simplicity that only children can visualize, reflecting Kids Earth Funds’ mission of opening cross-cultural communication and echoing MUJI’s human-centered approach to retail.
Nagoya TV Tower [Nagoya Pt. 2] (Travels in Japan Pt. 17)
Second day in Nagoya and took some footage at and around Nagoya's TV Tower. Enjoy!
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VIDEO GAME (When Imaginary)
Nagoya TV tower
The Nagoya TV Tower (名古屋テレビ塔 Nagoya Terebi-tō?) is a TV tower in Nagoya, central Japan.
History
It is the oldest TV tower in Japan, and was completed in 1954. It is located in the centre of Hisaya Ōdori Park. The tower is 180 metres high, and has two main observation decks at the heights of 90 metres (the indoor Sky Deck) and 100 metres (the outdoor Sky Balcony). The tower also includes a restaurant and gallery at 30 metres. Nagoya TV Tower closely resembles the Eiffel Tower. Recently, the tower became known under the nickname of Thunder Tower due to the nighttime illumination.
In popular culture
The famous movie monster, Godzilla pulled the tower down in Mothra vs. Godzilla (1964), and twenty-eight years later, it was destroyed again in the 1992 remake, Godzilla vs. Mothra. This time around, it is demolished by the monster Battra, when the creature attacks Nagoya.
Nagoya (名古屋) is the largest city in the Chūbu region of Japan. It is Japan's fourth-largest incorporated city and the third-most-populous urban area. It is located on the Pacific coast on central Honshu. It is the capital of Aichi Prefecture and is one of Japan's major ports along with those of Tokyo, Osaka, Kobe, Yokohama, Chiba, and Kitakyushu. It is also the center of Japan's third-largest metropolitan region, known as the Chūkyō metropolitan area. As of 2015, 2.28 million people lived in the city, part of Chūkyō Metropolitan Area's 10.11 million people.[4] It is also one of the 50 largest urban areas in the world.
Oda Nobunaga and his protégés Toyotomi Hideyoshi and Tokugawa Ieyasu were powerful warlords based in the Nagoya area who gradually succeeded in unifying Japan. In 1610, Tokugawa Ieyasu moved the capital of Owari Province from Kiyosu, about seven kilometers (4.3 miles) away, to a more strategic location in present-day Nagoya.
Tokugawa period
During this period Nagoya Castle was constructed, built partly from materials taken from Kiyosu Castle. During the construction, the entire town around Kiyosu Castle, consisting of around 60,000 people, moved from Kiyosu to the newly planned town around Nagoya Castle.[5] Around the same time, the nearby ancient Atsuta Shrine was designated as a waystation, called Miya (the Shrine), on the important Tōkaidō road, which linked the two capitals of Kyoto and Edo (now Tokyo). A town developed around the temple to support travelers. The castle and shrine towns formed the city.
Industrialization
During the Meiji Restoration Japan's provinces were restructured into prefectures and the government changed from family to bureaucratic rule. Nagoya was proclaimed a city on October 1, 1889, and designated a city on September 1, 1956, by government ordinance.
Nagoya became an industrial hub for the region. Its economic sphere included the famous pottery towns of Tokoname, Tajimi and Seto, as well as Okazaki, one of the only places where gunpowder was produced under the shogunate. Other industries included cotton and complex mechanical dolls called karakuri ningyō.
Mitsubishi Aircraft Company was established in 1920 in Nagoya and became one of the largest aircraft manufacturers in Japan. The availability of space and the central location of the region and the well-established connectivity were some of the major factors that lead to the establishment of the aviation industry there.
World War II and later
Aerial photographs of Nagoya
Nagoya was the target of US air raids during World War II. The population of Nagoya at this time was estimated to be 1.5 million, fourth among Japanese cities and one of the three largest centers of the Japanese aircraft industry. It was estimated that 25% of its workers were engaged in aircraft production. Important Japanese aircraft targets (numbers 193, 194, 198, 2010, and 1729) were within the city itself, while others (notably 240 and 1833) were to the north of Kagamigahara. It was estimated that they produced between 40% and 50% of Japanese combat aircraft and engines, such as the vital Mitsubishi A6M Zero fighter. The Nagoya area also produced machine tools, bearings, railway equipment, metal alloys, tanks, motor vehicles and processed foods during World War II.
Air raids began on April 18, 1942, with an attack on a Mitsubishi Heavy Industries aircraft works, the Matsuhigecho oil warehouse, the Nagoya Castle military barracks and the Nagoya war industries plant.[6] The bombing continued through the spring of 1945, and included large-scale firebombing. Nagoya was the target of two of Bomber Command’s attacks.
Gifu - 2012
This is the final edit at capturing the year (or actually eight months) in Gifu. The music is Gicchonchon, a Meiji era song, that I arranged on GarageBand.
Summer memories in Minokamo Gifuken
2015-8/8 COG GIFIC Youth Flare up at Minokamo Gifuken
Gifu City Promotional DVD Highlights
MUJI無印良品: MUJI+KIDS EARTH FUND+NAKED Inc. in NY「WORLD KID'S FIREWORKS EXHIBITION」
日本やNYでは当たり前の花火。しかし、世界では花火を上げられない国がほとんどです。花火を身近に感じるということ、それは平和であるということです。花火の絵をデジタルにして打ち上げる「FIREWORKS BY NAKED」というデジタルアートコレクションを持つNAKED Inc.が、子供地球基金の活動に共鳴し、MUJI Fifth Avenueの店内に花火を打ち上げます。
The exhibition, entitled Kids Earth Project, will feature artwork created by children around the world curated by the Kids Earth Fund. There will also be a digital display of illustrations created by New York City-based kids ages 5-12 during a MUJI-sponsored workshop held at the Fifth Avenue flagship store. These pieces display a sense of purity and simplicity that only children can visualize, reflecting Kids Earth Funds’ mission of opening cross-cultural communication and echoing MUJI’s human-centered approach to retail.
Hanabi 2017 in Nakatsugawa, Gifuken, Japan
มีโอกาสใช้ชีวิตในญี่ปุ่น3ปี ขอบันทึกความทรงจำดีๆหน่อยนะ
“เทศกาลฮานาบิ” หรือเทศกาลดอกไม้ไฟจัดขึ้นช่วงเดือนสิงหาคม คนญี่ปุ่นจะแต่งชุดยูกะตะมาเดินเที่ยวงานกัน เมืองนี้เป็นเมืองเล็กๆที่ปกติแล้วจะไม่คึกคักสักเท่าไหร่ แต่พอถึงเทศกาลผู้คนหลั่งไหลมาจากไหนกันก็ไม่รู้แปลกดี ยิ่งหนุ่มสาวที่ปกติไม่เคยเห็นอยู่แล้วยิ่งแปลกใจไปใหญ่ สองข้างทางอันยาวเหยียดเต็มไปด้วย “โชเต็น”ร้านขายของ เราชอบวัฒนธรรมของคนญี่ปุ่นมากๆเป็นอะไรที่น่ารักน่าหลงไหล จบการบันทึกแบบดื้อๆเลย แฮร่
บันทึกฉบับที่ 1
Nakatsugawa
Passeio a Nakatsugawa, em Miyajima Camping!
Japan Day - Tent Tour
A tour video shown throughout the day at Japan Day in Central Park 2009.