{
    "instructions": [
        {
            "date": [
                {
                    "earliest": 1999,
                    "value": "1999-10-01",
                    "latest": 1999,
                    "primary": true
                }
            ],
            "note": "EOWEN",
            "instruction": "amber",
            "type": "HANDLING STATUS"
        }
    ],
    "note": [
        {
            "type": "catalogue note",
            "value": "OLD DESCRIPTION: Bought by Jennifer Punnet in 1977. (to ask doc officer best way to capture when no entry\/ acquisition records) IPATEL, 18.04.24"
        }
    ],
    "loan": {
        "value": "N"
    },
    "subject": [
        {
            "summary": {
                "title": "Japan"
            },
            "@link": {
                "role": [
                    {
                        "value": "place"
                    }
                ],
                "attribution": {
                    "attributor": "Learning Section"
                }
            },
            "@admin": {
                "uid": "hmc-subject-43",
                "id": "subject-43",
                "uuid": "28198063-b27c-3851-a762-44e9ff6a6aae"
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            "@entity": "reference"
        },
        {
            "summary": {
                "title": "Geta shoes"
            },
            "@link": {
                "role": [
                    {
                        "value": "learning subject"
                    }
                ],
                "attribution": {
                    "attributor": "Learning Section"
                }
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            "@admin": {
                "uid": "hmc-subject-308",
                "id": "subject-308",
                "uuid": "1d3ac441-b22e-392f-bb7a-49fd3c49262b"
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    "description": [
        {
            "type": "catalogue description",
            "value": "Pair of child's wooden Geta shoes.",
            "primary": true
        },
        {
            "type": "manufacture basic (online)",
            "value": "These geta are made of wood, cloth and brass. Geta have a wooden platform that the foot is set on. Two 'teeth' support the wooden platform.  A geta shoe is often carved out of one solid piece of wood although not always. Cloth strips run from both sides of the geta and meet in the front middle of the shoe in order to strap feet in. The strips are often held in place by a brass disc on the bottom of the shoe. Members of the family used to make the Geta and Tabi for their own families so they were always made to the person's exact foot size."
        },
        {
            "type": "manufacture more (online)",
            "value": "For most styles of geta there are four main parts: one piece of unfinished wood on which a foot is set (a dai), the cloth that runs between the big toe and the little toe and two wooden sections below the dai called the teeth or 'ha'.\n \nTraditionally, the geta platform is made from paulownia or cryptomeria wood whilst the ha are made from oak or magnolia. The dai can range in colours from natural to stained and range in shapes from oval (more feminine) to rectangular (more masculine). The cloth that runs inbetween the toes is slightly different from western 'flipflop' style shoes: the thong part of the geta attaches in the center of the dai, not to one side. This means that getas can be worn on either feet and that feet are slightly off-centre when in the geta. Despite the feet being off-centre, this prevents the backs of the geta from hitting. Today it is possible to buy many kinds of geta, including those made from coloured vinyl with velvet thongs.  \n\nGetas are very easy to slip on and off. In Japanese culture, it is expected that everyone take off their shoes before entering a house. This serves several purposes: keeping the house clean, preserving the often-delicate flooring and showing a symbolic 'casting off' of worries from the outside world. Even with geta not as popular today, every house still has a 'getabako', or geta box, in the entryway to a house."
        },
        {
            "historical": true,
            "type": "use",
            "value": "How is it used? \nThe style of geta shown here is a 'senryou' geta. Senryou geta have a wedge shaped front ha instead of a rectangle front ha. Ha's are the raised blocks or 'teeth' beneath the sole. They are also named lucky or great geta. This style was especially popular from 1904 -1905 during the Russo-Japanese War. The term 'senryou' means occupation in Japanese and refers to the patriotic feeling of the time. \n \n \nWho by and why them? \nGeta sandals are worn by both men and women. All types of people wear geta, from the emperor's elaborate geta for ceremonies, to sushi chefs who use very high geta to keep their feet above fish scraps, to people who wear 'ashida' geta which are made for the rain. Today geta are not as popular as they used to be, but are still worn with traditional Japanese clothing such as kimonos, and also worn with western clothes especially during the summer months. \n \nGetas are very easy to slip on and off. In Japanese culture, it is expected that everyone take off their shoes before entering a house. This serves several purposes: keeps the house clean, preserves the often-delicate flooring, and shows a symbolic 'casting off' of worries from the outside world. Even with geta not as popular today, every house still has a 'getabako' or geta box, in the entryway to a house."
        },
        {
            "historical": true,
            "type": "use",
            "value": "Geta allow air to circulate freely around the feet. This circulation is especially useful in Japan's humid climate. During colder weather, geta may be worn along with 'tabi' - a sock that has a separate section for the big toe. Geta are made and worn for all different reasons. High geta could be used to keep feet dry or to protect valuable kimonos. \n \nApprentice Geisha (traditional female Japanese entertainers) often wear very high geta which can be difficult to walk in. Sumo wrestlers in the two lowest divisions must also wear geta all the time. Children's geta with bells in the heels are worn for special ocassions and to visit the Shinto shrines on particular bithdays. Special geta for dealing with the muddy and wet conditions in the rice growing fields were designed around 2000 years ago when rice production was introduced to Japan. These geta had large wooden platforms that spread the weight over a larger area to avoid sinking in the mud."
        },
        {
            "historical": true,
            "type": "use",
            "value": "Geta are traditional raised and thonged footwear worn by the Japanese for all types of occasions."
        },
        {
            "type": "use",
            "value": "Geta are traditional raised and thonged footwear worn by the Japanese for all types of occasions.  \nHow is it used? \nThe style of geta shown here is a \u00e2\u20ac\u0153senryou\u00e2\u20ac\ufffd geta.  Senryou geta have a wedge shaped front ha instead of a rectangle front ha. Ha\u00e2\u20ac\u2122s are the raised blocks or \u00e2\u20ac\u02dcteeth\u00e2\u20ac\u2122 beneath the sole.  They are also named lucky or great geta.  This style was especially popular from 1904 -1905 during the Russo-Japanese War.  The term \u00e2\u20ac\u0153senryou\u00e2\u20ac\ufffd means occupation in Japanese and refers to the patriotic feeling of the time. \nWho by and why them? \nGeta sandals are worn by both men and women.  All types of people wear geta, from the emperor\u00e2\u20ac\u2122s elaborate geta for ceremonies, to sushi chefs who use very high geta to keep their feet above fish scraps, to people who wear \u00e2\u20ac\u0153ashida\u00e2\u20ac\ufffd geta which are made for the rain.  Today geta are not as popular as they used to be, but are still worn with traditional Japanese clothing such as kimonos, and also worn with western clothes especially during the summer months. \nGetas are very easy to slip on and off.  In Japanese culture, it is expected that everyone take off their shoes before entering a house.  This serves several purposes:  keeps the house clean, preserves the often-delicate flooring, and shows a symbolic \u00e2\u20ac\u0153casting off\u00e2\u20ac\ufffd of worries from the outside world.  Even with geta not as popular today, every house still has a \u00e2\u20ac\u0153getabako,\u00e2\u20ac\ufffd or geta box, in the entryway to a house. \nGeta allow air to circulate freely around the feet.  This circulation is especially useful in Japan\u00e2\u20ac\u2122s humid climate.  During colder weather, geta maybe be worn along with \u00e2\u20ac\u0153tabi,\u00e2\u20ac\ufffd a sock that has a separate section for the big toe.  Geta are made and worn for all different reasons.  High geta could be used to keep feet dry or to protect valuable kimonos.  Apprentice Geisha (traditional female Japanese entertainers) often wear very high geta which can be difficult to walk in; also, Sumo wrestlers in the 2 lowest divisions must wear geta all the time.   \nChildren\u00e2\u20ac\u2122s geta with bells in the heels are worn for special ocassions and to visit the Shinto shrines on particular bithdays. Special geta for dealing with the muddy and wet conditions in the rice growing fields were designed around 2000 years ago when rice production was introduced to Japan. These geta had large wooden platforms that spread the weight over a larger area to avoid sinking in the mud."
        },
        {
            "attribution": {
                "attributor": "Patel, India"
            },
            "type": "description",
            "value": "Pair of child's wooden Geta shoes."
        }
    ],
    "language": [
        "eng"
    ],
    "title": [
        {
            "type": "catalogue title",
            "value": "geta",
            "primary": true
        },
        {
            "type": "display title"
        },
        {
            "type": "display title",
            "value": "geta"
        }
    ],
    "type": {
        "sub_type": [
            "general"
        ],
        "scope": "TOP",
        "base": "object"
    },
    "arrangement": {
        "other_finding_aids": "HMG - Forest Hill; Horniman Museum; Hands on Base; Display; Discovery Box; Footwear"
    },
    "legal": {
        "status": "handling collection"
    },
    "options": {
        "item_count": "2",
        "option7": "Anthropology",
        "option5": "Clothes: footwear",
        "use": "Geta are traditional raised and thonged footwear worn by the Japanese for all types of occasions.  \nThe style of geta shown here is a \u00e2\u20ac\u0153senryou\u00e2\u20ac\ufffd geta.  Senryou geta have a wedge shaped front ha instead of a rectangle front ha. Ha\u00e2\u20ac\u2122s are the raised blocks or \u00e2\u20ac\u02dcteeth\u00e2\u20ac\u2122 beneath the sole.  They are also named lucky or great geta.  This style was especially popular from 1904 -1905 during the Russo-Japanese War.  The term \u00e2\u20ac\u0153senryou\u00e2\u20ac\ufffd means occupation in Japanese and refers to the patriotic feeling of the time. \nWho by and why them? \nGeta sandals are worn by both men and women.  All types of people wear geta, from the emperor\u00e2\u20ac\u2122s elaborate geta for ceremonies, to sushi chefs who use very high geta to keep their feet above fish scraps, to people who wear \u00e2\u20ac\u0153ashida\u00e2\u20ac\ufffd geta which are made for the rain.  Today geta are not as popular as they used to be, but are still worn with traditional Japanese clothing such as kimonos, and also worn with western clothes especially during the summer months. \nGetas are very easy to slip on and off.  In Japanese culture, it is expected that everyone take off their shoes before entering a house.  This serves several purposes:  keeps the house clean, preserves the often-delicate flooring, and shows a symbolic \u00e2\u20ac\u0153casting off\u00e2\u20ac\ufffd of worries from the outside world.  Even with geta not as popular today, every house still has a \u00e2\u20ac\u0153getabako,\u00e2\u20ac\ufffd or geta box, in the entryway to a house. \nGeta allow air to circulate freely around the feet.  This circulation is especially useful in Japan\u00e2\u20ac\u2122s humid climate.  During colder weather, geta maybe be worn along with \u00e2\u20ac\u0153tabi,\u00e2\u20ac\ufffd a sock that has a separate section for the big toe.  Geta are made and worn for all different reasons.  High geta could be used to keep feet dry or to protect valuable kimonos.  Apprentice Geisha (traditional female Japanese entertainers) often wear very high geta which can be difficult to walk in; also, Sumo wrestlers in the 2 lowest divisions must wear geta all the time.   \nChildren\u00e2\u20ac\u2122s geta with bells in the heels are worn for special ocassions and to visit the Shinto shrines on particular bithdays. Special geta for dealing with the muddy and wet conditions in the rice growing fields were designed around 2000 years ago when rice production was introduced to Japan. These geta had large wooden platforms that spread the weight over a larger area to avoid sinking in the mud.\nGeta allow air to circulate freely around the feet. This circulation is especially useful in Japan's humid climate. During colder weather, geta may be worn along with 'tabi' - a sock that has a separate section for the big toe. Geta are made and worn for all different reasons. High geta could be used to keep feet dry or to protect valuable kimonos. \n \nApprentice Geisha (traditional female Japanese entertainers) often wear very high geta which can be difficult to walk in. Sumo wrestlers in the two lowest divisions must also wear geta all the time. Children's geta with bells in the heels are worn for special ocassions and to visit the Shinto shrines on particular bithdays. Special geta for dealing with the muddy and wet conditions in the rice growing fields were designed around 2000 years ago when rice production was introduced to Japan. These geta had large wooden platforms that spread the weight over a larger area to avoid sinking in the mud.",
        "flag4": "N",
        "option6": "http:\/\/www.allaboutshoes.ca\/en\/japanese\/; \nhttp:\/\/www.egeorgeonline.com\/getapage\/index.html; \nhttp:\/\/www.youtube.com\/watch?v=DetLV-mxCrw",
        "flag3": "N",
        "flag2": "N",
        "flag1": "N",
        "system_count": "2",
        "option1": "With wooden bottoms, geta are very noisy to walk in. The noise that they make when walking is often referred to as 'karankoron' in Japanese. Older Japanese often describe this sound as something that they miss most about modern life. \n\nSpecial getas were designed to avoid sinking in the rice paddy fields. \n\nCan you find any other footwear on Hands On-line or in the museum that are designed to spread a person's bodyweight in the same way?",
        "option2": "These geta are made of wood, cloth, and brass.  Geta have a wooden platform that the foot is set on, 2 \u201cteeth\u201d that support the wooden platform.  A geta shoe is often carved out of one solid piece of wood, although not always.  Cloth strips run from both sides of the geta and meet in the front middle of the shoe in order to strap feet in.  The strips are often held in place by a brass disc on the bottom of the shoe. Members of the family used to make the Geta and Tabi for their own families so they were always made to the person\u2019s exact foot size.\nFor most styles of geta there are 4 main parts.  One piece of unfinished wood on which a foot is set (a dai), the cloth that runs between the big toe and little toe, and 2 wooden sections below the dai called the teeth or \u201cha.\u201d \nTraditionally, the geta platform is made from paulownia or cryptomeria wood whilst the ha are made from oak or magnolia.  The dai can range in colours from natural to stained and range in shapes from oval (more feminine) to rectangular (more masculine).  The cloth that runs inbetween the toes is slightly different from western \u201cflipflop\u201d style shoes.  The thong part of the geta attaches in the center of the dai, not to one side.  This means that getas can be worn on either feet and that feet are slightly off-centre when in the geta.  Despite feet being off-centre, this prevents the backs of the geta from hitting.  Today it is possible to buy many kinds of geta, including those made from coloured vinyl with velvet thongs.  \n\nGetas are very easy to slip on and off.  In Japanese culture, it is expected that everyone take off their shoes before entering a house.  This serves several purposes:  keeps the house clean, preserves the often-delicate flooring, and shows a symbolic \u201ccasting off\u201d of worries from the outside world.  Even with geta not as popular today, every house still has a \u201cgetabako,\u201d or geta box, in the entryway to a house.",
        "option10": "Discovery Box: Footwear, Community Education:Hands on Costume"
    },
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    "creation": {
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    "summary": {
        "title": "geta sandals"
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                    "type": "catalogue culture",
                    "value": "Japanese"
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        {
            "type": "object name"
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        {
            "type": "object name"
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                    "title": "shoes (clothing: footwear)"
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                    "role": [
                        {
                            "value": "object name (Horniman Ethno.)"
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                "@admin": {
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            "type": "object name (Horniman Ethno.)"
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        {
            "type": "object name (Horniman Ethno.)",
            "value": "shoes (clothing: footwear)"
        },
        {
            "type": "object name",
            "value": "geta sandals"
        },
        {
            "type": "object name",
            "value": "Geta Sandals"
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    ],
    "category": [
        {
            "type": "category1",
            "value": "Education Handling Collection: Anthropology"
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                "value": "1977",
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                "role": [
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                "value": "1977",
                "latest": 1977
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                    "value": "2016-01-06",
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                    "level4": "individual locations on part records",
                    "location": "Horniman Museum. Hands on Base",
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                    "level3": "Footwear",
                    "level2": "Discovery Box"
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                "purpose": "annual audit",
                "location": "Admin",
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                "level2": "see part records"
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            "@admin": {
                "uid": "hmc-facility-11508",
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            "@entity": "reference",
            "primary": true
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        {
            "summary": {
                "title": "see part records"
            },
            "@link": {
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                    "earliest": 2007,
                    "value": "2007-07-31",
                    "latest": 2007
                },
                "current": "N",
                "role": [
                    {
                        "value": "historical"
                    }
                ],
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                    "level5": "000004",
                    "level6": "000001",
                    "location": "Horniman Museum",
                    "level1": "FH",
                    "level3": "00000L",
                    "level2": "SS"
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                "location": "TOP RECORD",
                "level1": "see part records"
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            "@admin": {
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            "@entity": "reference"
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                "title": "Hands on Base"
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                    "value": "2007-12-10",
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                },
                "level4": "individual locations on part records",
                "current": "N",
                "role": [
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                        "value": "historical"
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                ],
                "last": {
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                },
                "purpose": "Learning Portal",
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                "level1": "Display",
                "level3": "Footwear",
                "level2": "Discovery Box"
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        {
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                "title": "raised sandal (sandal (clothing: footwear)); geta"
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        {
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}