My entry, for this week's Nostalgia, is a photo of a scroll that we bought in Korea from a famous Calligrapher. Many of his works are in museums and other government buildings throughout the Republic of South Korea. At first, this looks like a set of three, but a closer look reveals that they are not a matching set. However, since they are very similar, we hung them together. The small set is a gift from a Filipina friend that we met while living in Korea. She bought them as a souvenir when she visited China.
Hi! wow, i know that's love as a Korean friend who studies here in Davao used to teach me hanggul but, it's really hard... love those photos, really korean touch....
ReplyDeleteNostalgia post here
what a nostalgic souvenir from Korea
ReplyDeletecalligraphy is such a graceful art. your scroll is beautiful.
ReplyDeleteI did recognize the japanese word 愛 ( ai or love) Ai is also my favorite japanese word^_^
ReplyDeleteBelated Happy Father's Day to you,Sir John^_^
i will never know what those writings were if you didn't explain. It is a nice decor though.
ReplyDeleteThat's an amazing piece of korean scripture that indicates your family name. Very nice.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.tsangreqz.com/2010/06/nostalgia6-old-picture.html
yeah I thought it is one set. absolutely look similar..its pretty though..
ReplyDeletewow! I love it!...very meaningful....:)
ReplyDeletethat's a very nice scroll and looks like one set.
ReplyDeletenice souvenir...
ReplyDeletewow..this is cool...a great remembrance of Korea...
ReplyDeleteThe centre large word is actually a chinese word read as "ai", which means love. Those words at the side are Korean words.
ReplyDeleteWhy the mixture is because China dynasty is very strong in the olden days, and Korea has to give them yearly gift. So Korea adopted many of the chinese culture, including the writings. It is read differently but the meaning is the same.