LaMedicine
One Too Many
- Messages
- 1,116
Or grandmother to grand daughter, mother-in-law to daughter-in-law, aunt to niece, one female member of the family to another.
Is there anything you were given, or, expect to pass on, whether coincidental or with intent? A special dress, an article of jewelry, silverware or chinaware, some furniture, or anything that means something? Something that may not quite be termed as an heirloom (I know there's an heirloom thread somewhere) but means something to you because it was passed on to you, or you want to pass it on to your daughter or some other female person related to you.
Do you have any photographs?
For us Japanese, it's common to pass on kimonos, especially formal ones, from mother to daughter, aunt to niece, mother-in-law to daughter-in-law.
My aunt, 1943.
Her daughter (my cousin) 1969.
The collar looks different, but that's because the original collar became soiled, so it was taken off, turned over and reattached so the motif on the collar is on the inside.
Me, 1963.
My daughter, 2011.
An aunt on my mother's side gave me the obi (sash) that my daughter is wearing, so she has on two items passed on to her from her senior generation--the kimono from her mother, obi from her great aunt.
Is there anything you were given, or, expect to pass on, whether coincidental or with intent? A special dress, an article of jewelry, silverware or chinaware, some furniture, or anything that means something? Something that may not quite be termed as an heirloom (I know there's an heirloom thread somewhere) but means something to you because it was passed on to you, or you want to pass it on to your daughter or some other female person related to you.
Do you have any photographs?
For us Japanese, it's common to pass on kimonos, especially formal ones, from mother to daughter, aunt to niece, mother-in-law to daughter-in-law.
The collar looks different, but that's because the original collar became soiled, so it was taken off, turned over and reattached so the motif on the collar is on the inside.
An aunt on my mother's side gave me the obi (sash) that my daughter is wearing, so she has on two items passed on to her from her senior generation--the kimono from her mother, obi from her great aunt.
Last edited: