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Japanese Woodblock Print Search

ukiyo-e.org

207 points by curmudgeon22 a month ago · 36 comments

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jeresig a month ago

Thank you for sharing my site! I built this a number of years ago as I was starting to learn about Japanese prints. I wanted a single place where I could find them across all of the various museums and universities that hold them. I use computer vision analysis to cluster prints together (using TinEye). A bunch more technical details from the last time this was posted: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=18344979

I’m working on a new site now that’s focused on prints that are for sale from dealers and auctions. Much more technically complex as it needs to be continuously updated. Hope to have a public beta soon!

PacificSpecific a month ago

Wow 2 ukiyo-e threads in 24 hours. This is really cool.

I posted that there was a museum in kurashiki in the other thread but neglected to post a link. For anyone interested here it is https://ukiyo-e-kurashiki.jp/?lang=en

S0und a month ago

If you're interested in the topic someone is streaming the whole process: https://www.twitch.tv/japaneseprintmaking

dang a month ago

One past thread:

Japanese Woodblock Print Search - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=18344979 - Oct 2018 (29 comments)

(Reposts are fine after a year or so; links to past threads are just to satisfy extra-curious readers)

abetusk a month ago

This is pretty amazing.

Surprisingly [0]:

> Ukiyo-e.org was created by John Resig ...

[0] https://ukiyo-e.org/about

miduil a month ago

Wow, that's wonderful. There is a store that sells original Woodblock prints in Vienna, close to the Opera. Every time I'm passing by I take a few moments to look and reflect on those prints, it's great recognizing some on this website now.

  • kehvyn a month ago

    I know exactly which store you're talking about, and I couldn't resist going in the one time I was in Vienna. It's a great store.

zactato a month ago

Pretty sure this was made by John Resig, the creator of jQuery.

I used to be friends with him back in the day and he described wanting to do something like this. He was/is a passionate dude.

Duanemclemore a month ago

Bookmarked for constant reference. As a designer, Japanese printmaking is a constant source of inspiration, and the effort that went into putting this together is pretty astounding. Thank you to the author for the hard work, and to the OP for surfacing it!

wise_blood a month ago

good job! I tried with a image of a Uniqlo t-shirt and it worked great

image: https://image.uniqlo.com/UQ/ST3/WesternCommon/imagesgoods/48...

result: https://ukiyo-e.org/upload/ac8aa7d9-d1c7-414d-b6d9-849371c88...

TrailingArbutus a month ago

I was in tokyo for quite a while in my most formative years, i love thisss. I think TinEye usage is cool, but aren't there better CV models out there which would fit this use case? Just wondering.

  • jeresig a month ago

    Probably! I made this about 15 years ago - the technology is evolved a lot since then!

thrownaway561 a month ago

For those that don't know, this site was made by John Resig, yes, the same dude that invented jQuery.

andeee23 a month ago

kawase hasui is hands down the best to ever do it

he does trees and foliage in s very special way

  • kehvyn a month ago

    A fellow Shin Hanga-era fan! There are dozens of us!

    Hasui is excellent, but Shiro Kasamatsu is my undisputed favorite. Something about the way he does buildings, and the dramatic colors, is exactly aimed at me.

  • chickensong a month ago

    No argument there.

    For fans of California and the Bay Area, Tom Killion is a local hero as well.

  • keiferski a month ago

    Agreed, he is my favorite as well. There is something so cinematic about every one of his images.

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