@article{oai:tobunken.repo.nii.ac.jp:00006277, author = {神谷, 榮子 and Kamiya, Eiko}, issue = {341}, journal = {美術研究, The bijutsu kenkyu : the journal of art studies}, month = {Feb}, note = {The author discussed two dōbuku handed down by Katakura Family and Tōshōgū Shrine in No. 303, the Bijutsu Kenkyu. The Katakura Family, formerly the local lord family with a castle in the present Shiroishi City, Miyagi Prefecture, had also handed down an almost contemporaneous coat made of fabric known as ōdon. This garment which has been called “dōbuku given from Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI can be interpreted as either a sleeveless dōbuku or a jin-baori (wartime coat) . Ōdon is a type of fabric woven with untwisted silk warp, thick ground weft of cotten and patterning weft of silk and it seems to have been already in use at the beginning of Ming Dynasty China, that is the fourteenth century. In the case of this jin-baori, the warp is untwisted silk yarn dyed pink, the ground weft is thick cotton yarn dyed red and the patterning weft mainly consists of silk yarns dyed olive green, blue, light green, pale pink and red respectively. Flat paper yarn covered with gold leaf and flat paper yarn covered with silver leaf are additionally used as weft for patterns. Colours are freely used, without strict repetition, in the fluent design of peony and lotus scrolls. This jin-baori is not lined. Therefore it is possible to directly observe the reverse. The width of the used cloth is about 56 cm and its length is about 420 cm. A noh constume of ōdon which is about as old is kept by Kasuga Shrine, Gifu Prefecture, and is introduced in this paper.}, pages = {1--22}, title = {片倉家伝来陣羽織二領 上}, year = {1988}, yomi = {[神谷栄子・田実栄子]} }