ABlipinTime (post: 1503846) wrote:I'm kindof curious on what the Japanese think of bed bugs (since that's the reason, so I'm told, of why we keep our bedding off the ground in the first place). Me = ignorant of Japanese bugs (unless of course we're talking about computer viruses XD . I'm sorry, bad pun.)
The way that the Japanese deal with dust mites is by hanging out their futon in the sun regularly]Well here was the amazon stuff...
http://www.amazon.com/Traditional-Japanese-Futon-Mattresses-Meditaion/dp/B003VQNM2I/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1315862835&sr=8-1http://www.amazon.com/Brand-Shikibuton-density-resilient-Folding/dp/B004SOQGVQ/ref=pd_sim_hg_2Doesn't look like the pictures you showed so I guess these are american wannabe Japanese futons. [/quote]
Yes, the futon in the first link doesn't look the same as a Japanese futon. In particular, it’s amusingly odd that it is clearly intended to be rolled up, because that is just not the way that Japanese people do things. Futons are supposed to be folded in thirds, usually in a s/z shape.
The second link is to something that we do in fact have in Japan; it's just not used nearly as commonly as a regular shikibuton. It's a mattress that can be used underneath the shikibuton.
Anyway... I really don't mind folding them up, that was kind of the appeal and expected that... but if up keep is really THAT much of a hassle still...
But I like my house spacey and empty. Living in a house with a mother who is a pack rat who throws nothing away, too much in too little space, never having any space to yourself, I wanna keep this place simple and clean as possible. And right now the idea of a full size bulky bed is un appealing. You can't move it, it's bulky... Even just a mattress is a pain to move around...
Really a Japanese futon doesn't sound that bad (I got plenty of room out back to hang it)
Oh. If that’s how you feel, then go for it. I guess I just tend to think that the routine involved with a futon would be troublesome to someone who isn’t used to it, but it doesn’t actually take that long.
What do they do in the winter? Just curious... I'm sure they don't hang it out when it's raining...
It doesn't have to be hung out every day, so on rainy days they just fold everything up and keep it inside. Honestly, I don't sleep Japanese-style in my own apartment, although I have done so on several occasions in the past, so I'm not entirely sure about what one does in the winter. I assume you would hang it out on sunny days and fold it up but leave it inside when the weather is inclement, just like during any other season. (*apartment came already furnished, Western-style*)
I was looking on Amazon.co.jp to see what the price of a shikibuton is in Japan, and I have to take back what I said about the prices. They are actually much cheaper than I realized—you can get them for only 3,000 to 8,000 yen (about $40-$100) in Japan. So actually, that shikibuton on the site Xeno linked is overpriced even for an import.
One thing that occurred to me since I last posted is that a kakebuton and a comforter are pretty much interchangeable. I use a kakebuton like a comforter on my Western-style bed, so you could also use an American comforter in place of a kakebuton; that's not the one that will affect the health of your back anyways, so the only consequence is that it wouldn't match the size of your shikibuton. And it would be much cheaper.
If it were me--if I had moved back to the States and really wanted to sleep Japanese-style instead of Western-style--then what I would
want to do is just import the shikibuton and kakebuton myself by buying them off of Amazon.co.jp. But since that's not possible, I guess what I would probably do is get the cheapest authentic-looking shikibuton I could find and use an American comforter in place of a kakebuton. Then if it turned out that one shikibuton was not enough padding, I would get one of those $75 three-fold foam mattresses from Amazon. That strikes me as being probably the cheapest way to get a reasonable approximation of the Japanese experience.
On a different note, the Japanese have all sorts of neat furniture that doesn't take up a lot of space, like chabudai (coffee tables), which are an appropriate height for sitting on the floor, and kotatsu (same as above but heated underneath). This makes chairs unnecessary, though there are also zaisu (chairs with a seat and back but no legs). A zaisu provides you with something to rest your back against but is easy to move around and takes up much less space than a traditional chair (particularly easy chairs).
Good luck finding a place to buy this sort of thing, though. There
are several websites selling Japanese furniture, but they all seem to be higher-end designer stuff, so I don't know how you could acquire Japanese-style furniture cheaply.