TumbleView

Your personal Tumblr library awaits

Sumo - Blog Posts

8 years ago
Look I Finally Doodle Preteen/tween Jeff N Sumo
Look I Finally Doodle Preteen/tween Jeff N Sumo

look i finally doodle preteen/tween Jeff n Sumo


Tags
8 years ago
@narsasistic-whales Y Oyo Yoyoyo My Laptop Actually Saved My Doodle So I Finished It Quick

@narsasistic-whales y oyo yoyoyo my laptop actually saved my doodle so I finished it quick

u get 2 now ig


Tags
5 years ago
Request From And Sorta Commission For @stars-with-citrus 0w0 I Hope You Like It Uwu

Request from and sorta commission for @stars-with-citrus 0w0 I hope you like it uwu


Tags
2 years ago

i love the fact that in the sequence that Clarence, Jeff and Sumo imagine anything they could do home alone in Clarence’s house; Clarence imagines poker with dogs, Jeff imagines cleaning the whole house with Sumo and Clarence tied up in a shut closet and Sumo imagines bombing Florida

I Love The Fact That In The Sequence That Clarence, Jeff And Sumo Imagine Anything They Could Do Home

Tags
6 years ago
It’s A Sleepy Rockruff!

it’s a sleepy rockruff!

I was experimenting with different brushes and shading in this one. It looks decent, but I wish I spent more time rendering the fur. I can’t redo anything, since I lost the original file oof. 


Tags
4 months ago

people enjoyed my last sumo fancam so here's another. happy yokozuna-ing, hosh.


Tags
4 months ago

I am learning video editing and using it for good


Tags
4 months ago

I failed to mention this in the original post, but Meiji-jingû is also a high point of sumo culture. Newly promoted yokozuna, the highest rank in the sport, perform their first ring entry dance there, before their first tournament at that level. This would be their first appearance with the "horizontal rope" (that's what yokozuna means), in the shimenawa style, around their waist.

That's just happened, with the 74th yokozuna making his debut.

Hoshoryu performs first ring-entering ceremony as yokozuna | NHK WORLD-JAPAN News
NHK WORLD
About 3,500 people gathered at Meiji Jingu shrine in Tokyo on Friday to see sumo yokozuna grand champion Hoshoryu perform his first ring-ent

The New Year shrine visit: Meiji-jingû

The New Year Shrine Visit: Meiji-jingû

A common New Year ritual in Japan is to go to a shrine, possibly a large one, a visit known as 初詣, hatsumôde. NHK reported that Meiji-jingû in particular was very busy. Of course, I would avoid that, so here we are with a more tranquil time, closer to the Autumn festival.

The New Year Shrine Visit: Meiji-jingû

Meiji-jingû was, as its name suggests, founded to enshrine the spirit of Emperor Meiji after his death. The first Emperor of the post-Edo period presided over sweeping societal reforms, such as the abolishment of classes like the samurai, as Japan re-opened to the rest of the world and sought to catch up. The Imperial attachment is symbolised by the Chrysanthemum crests on the torii.

The New Year Shrine Visit: Meiji-jingû

One of the things that can be wished for at Meiji-jingû is a happy marriage and family life, particularly at this dedicated spot with two camphor trees planted in 1920, linked with sacred rope - these are called "married trees", 夫婦楠 Meoto Kusu.


Tags
9 months ago

Arashio-beya

Arashio-beya

The quickest way to witness some sumo wrestling is probably to watch a morning practice session in a stable (though we'd probably use the word "club" in Europe). Arashio-beya in Tôkyô is one such stable, with the nearly-daily practice watchable from the street.

On some days, wrestlers may come out to meet the spectators and pose for some photos. This happened on the day I was there.

Arashio-beya

While researching for this post, it appeared that these two wrestlers may be among the stable's most successful. Arashio-beya was founded in 2002, and has had four wrestlers reach the top division as sekitori. Their first one is retired and now manages the stable, and their second was Wakatakakage, who won their first major tournament in March 2022 - and who probably is pictured left (I'm confident it is him based on other photos, but I'm couching it slightly just in case I'm wrong). Wakatakakage is the youngest of three brothers who all wrestle for Arashio-beya, and one of his brothers is the third sekitori from the stable. The fourth and most recent is Kôtokuzan, probably pictured right.

For someone who knows absolutely nothing about sumo, looking back at that morning, it's neat to think I was in the presence of people who would fulfill their ambitions.

Arashio-beya

Tags
9 months ago

Walking in on the Nagoya Basho

Walking In On The Nagoya Basho

While I saw Tokyo's sumo arena out of sumo season, I stumbled on an active sumo tournament last summer. July is the month of the Nagoya Basho, and the flags of the various participating sekitori (officially ranked wrestlers, all the names on the flags ending with the character zeki, 関) welcomed not only the spectators, but also the visitors to Nagoya Castle. That's quite the entrance!

Walking In On The Nagoya Basho

I did see one or two sumo wrestlers out and about, and made nothing of it until I noticed the flags. That's when I put everything together regarding what a man at the subway had asked. "Sumô? Sumô?" That's literally all he said, no other attempt to clarify. Yes, I know what sumo is, but it seemed unlikely to me that was what he was talking about - we were, after all, just standing in the subway tunnels waiting for a heavy shower to pass, the topic didn't fit the context and what I knew, I was just going to the castle. So I just stuck to looking a bit dim, like I didn't understand (which, to be fair, I was, and didn't).

Walking In On The Nagoya Basho

As a footnote, the Nagoya Basho will no longer be held inside the castle walls from 2025. It moves to a brand new arena just to the North.


Tags
9 months ago

Ryôgoku Kokugikan

Ryôgoku Kokugikan

It's sumo season in Tokyo! Though, to be fair, it's sumo season three months per year, as this arena, the Kokugikan in Ryôgoku, on the East bank of the Sumida-gawa two stops from Akihabara on the Chûô-Sôbu line, hosts half of the year's six major tournaments.

Ryôgoku Kokugikan

It wasn't open when I visited Tokyo, so I didn't see inside, but even then, there are apparently, and unsurprisingly, a lot of sumo-related places to visit in Ryôgoku, like Ekô-in temple... and I missed them all! Well, apart from the odd statue.

Ryôgoku Kokugikan

I went to Ryôgoku area without a real plan, I wandered around and found some interesting places I'll get to another time, but one thing I think I planned was to try the "lunch of champions", the classic stew for sumo wrestlers: chankonabe, or chanko for short. It was rich and copious, as you'd expect, and, as I remember, I didn't quite finish it.

Ryôgoku Kokugikan

Tags
Loading...
End of content
No more pages to load
Explore Tumblr Blog
Search Through Tumblr Tags