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| - This is a list of terms frequently encountered in the description of ukiyo-e style Japanese woodblock prints and paintings.
* Aizuri-e
* Baren
* Benizuri-e
* Bijinga
* Bokashi (printing)
* Chūban, a print size about 7 by 10 inches (18 by 25 centimeters)
* Chūtanzaku, a print size about 14 by 5 inches (36 by 13 centimeters)
* Edo period
* Geisha
* Hashira-e, “pillar print”, about 28 by 4.5 inches (73 by 13 centimeters)
* Hosoban, a print size about 13 by 5 inches (33 by 14.5 centimeters)
* Ise
* Kakemono-e, an ōban diptych arranged one above the other (also a hanging scroll paintings)
* Kamigata
* Kappazuri
* Kisokaidō
* Mameban, a print size about 4.75 by 3.2 inches (12 by 8 centimeters), sometimes called a “toy print”
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abstract
| - This is a list of terms frequently encountered in the description of ukiyo-e style Japanese woodblock prints and paintings.
* Aizuri-e
* Baren
* Benizuri-e
* Bijinga
* Bokashi (printing)
* Chūban, a print size about 7 by 10 inches (18 by 25 centimeters)
* Chūtanzaku, a print size about 14 by 5 inches (36 by 13 centimeters)
* Edo period
* Geisha
* Hashira-e, “pillar print”, about 28 by 4.5 inches (73 by 13 centimeters)
* Hosoban, a print size about 13 by 5 inches (33 by 14.5 centimeters)
* Ise
* Kakemono-e, an ōban diptych arranged one above the other (also a hanging scroll paintings)
* Kamigata
* Kappazuri
* Kisokaidō
* Mameban, a print size about 4.75 by 3.2 inches (12 by 8 centimeters), sometimes called a “toy print”
* Mount Fuji
* Nikuhitsuga
* Nishiki-e
* Ōban, a print size about 13 by 5 inches (33 by 14.5 centimeters)
* Ōkubi-e
* Osaka
* Schools
* Shikishiban, a print size about 8 by 7 inches (21 by 18 centimeters) often used for surimono
* Shunga
* Surimono
* Tate-e, a print in vertical or “portrait” format
* Tenpō reforms
* Tōkaidō
* Ukiyo
* Urushi-e
* Washi
* Yakusha-e
* Yoko-e, a print in horizontal or “landscape” format
* Yokohama-e
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