View allAll Photos Tagged emas
Evening lanterns illuminate a group of ema votive tablets. Izumojisaino Shinto shrine, Sainokamicho, Kyoto Japan. Film scan.
Ema are small wooden plaques in which visitors to the shrine write their wishes and hopes for the future. "Postcards to the gods" is how they are sometimes described.
Kawagoe Hikiwa Shrine.
Kawagoe, Saitama, Japan
Tsuyunoten Shrine, Kita-ku, Osaka. November 10, 2017.
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A ema, também chamada nandu, nhandu, guaripé e xuri, é uma ave da família Rheidae cujo habitat se restringe à América do Sul. Apesar de possuir grandes asas, não voa.
(Dromaius novaehollandiae)
Wanganella - NSW
Austrália
Curiously, this was a bird I took for granted. I thought that all I needed to do was go to Australia, leave the cities, and it would appear, running along the road.
I couldn't have been more wrong. And we covered many kilometers of road.
This photo was taken on the afternoon of the very last day when we saw this individual for the briefest of moments.
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All my photos are now organized into sets by the country where they were taken, by taxonomic order, by family, by species (often with just one photo for the rarer ones), and by the date they were taken.
So, you may find:
- All the photos for this trip Austrália (2024) (309)
- All the photos for this order CASUARIIFORMES (1)
- All the photos for this family Casuariidae (Casuariídeos) (1)
- All the photos for this species Dromaius novaehollandiae (1)
- All the photos taken this day 2024/11/25 (30)
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Fat cats adorn wooden wishing plaques at a shinto shrine in Tokyo. The plaques are known as Ema 絵馬, translated as 'picture horse', and are intended to bring luck to the person who hangs them. These plaques funnel a long tradition that started during the 8th century Nara period where people donated horses, seen as the “vehicles of gods”, to the shrines to assist with their prayer. Over the subsequent years due to the financial cost of horses, the tradition shifted first to pictures of horses on wood, and eventually to pictures of other animals. Tokyo, Japan.
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Rising sun coming through a rack of ema (wooden votive tablets) at Setagaya Hachiman shrine.
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Meiji Jingu, Tokyo, Japan.
July 2014.
Fujifilm X100S.
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Ema (絵馬) are wooden plaques, often adorned with vibrant designs, where people inscribe their wishes for the future and then hang them at shrines and temples, following a common Japanese tradition. Initially, these plaques featured images of horses, as they were substitutes for actual horse offerings. Nowadays, they can display various illustrations.
The term ‘Ema’ is derived from two Kanji characters meaning ‘picture’ and ‘horse’. Traditionally, the most authentic Ema depicted a horse, reflecting their origin. During the late Nara period, people would offer horses to shrines, believing them to be divine messengers that could convey their wishes to the gods. However, as donating horses became too costly, the practice evolved into offering wooden plaques with horse images.
Today, while horse-themed Ema remain popular, there are many other types. For instance, at Shinto Inari shrines, you might find Ema featuring foxes, and there are even Ema with anime themes.
Kanda Shrine (神田明神, Kanda-myōjin, Chiyoda, Tokyo, Japan
(Rhea americana)
Pantanal
Brasil
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All my photos are now organized into sets by the country where they were taken, by taxonomic order, by family, by species (often with just one photo for the rarer ones), and by the date they were taken.
So, you may find:
- All the photos for this trip Brasil // Pantanal (2015) (263)
- All the photos for this order RHEIFORMES (6)
- All the photos for this family Rheidae (Reídeos) (6)
- All the photos for this species Rhea americana (6)
- All the photos taken this day 2015/09/14 (46)
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Photographed while exploring with Alice-san, Kageyama-san, Lonny, Mamoru-san, and Yoshikatsu-san. Kagurazka, Shinjuku, Tokyo. November 4, 2019.
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ND/MD EMA tone 3 (coming soon)
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Ema are small wooden plaques, common to Japan, in which Shinto and Buddhist worshippers write prayers or wishes. Ema are left hanging up at the shrine, where the kami (spirits or gods) are believed to receive them.
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