Showing posts with label Halloween in Japan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Halloween in Japan. Show all posts

October 27, 2012

Halloween Report


Parties and parades are this weekend. Candy displays are small or non-existent in stores here. Anything Halloween is already sold out in our neighborhood grocery store.

Check out HTJ Halloween posts by clicking on the labels below.

Serious Sweepers Or Halloween Broom Parking?


October 31, 2010

Japanese Halloween Treat


This is the first time I found Halloween-shaped glutinous rice cakes filled with bean paste at our neighborhood grocery store. Yum!



A purple ghost and a jack-o-lantern.
Posted by Picasa

November 01, 2009

Halloween Pumpkin Ramen


I bought this at a convenience store on sale a day after Halloween. It's a snack; dried pieces of pumpkin flavored ramen. See the tape on the little witch's cheek? That's a boo-boo (a sore caused by an accident.) I've seen that on other Halloween decorations here. Maybe it's becoming a Japanese Halloween motif.
Posted by Picasa

October 31, 2009

Happy Halloween!


No party yet this year. Little Brother came home Friday with a fever. H1N1 is making its rounds here. It is called Type A. Fortunately, he doesn't have that flu. Just a cold. So no happy Halloween for us.

Something exciting did happen today, though. I rescued another kitten! I heard it meowing in a shed near the field behind our house. Click on the label below. We will take care of it until we find a home for it. She's spending a couple of days at the vet.

Click on the label below to see what we've done in the past for Halloween. I wanted to post a photo of something orange so here's a persimmon tree. The kitten is orange, but I didn't get a picture of her.

Posted by Picasa

December 06, 2008

Wrapped Tree

Posted by Picasa

Click on the photo to enlarge it. It looks like a Halloween decoration. This persimmon tree is wrapped. Any idea why?

November 01, 2008

Halloween Party Treats 2008


Pumpkin flavored marshmallows! Made in Japan.


This cookie-covered chocolate is available year round, but it had Halloween decorations on the box this month.


This big bag of candy was bought in the States. Little Brother was going to give it to his friends for souvenirs, but couldn't give it away at school. He made treat bags to give away.


You've probably seen these before. Instead of gummi bears, there were Halloween shaped gummis.


Posted by Picasa

October 31, 2008

Pumpkin Hunt


We usually order a pumpkin from FBC (Foreign Buyer's Club) for our Halloween party. The pumpkins are grown by Japanese farmers and then FBC delivers them. This year I forgot! A few flower shops and food departments in department stores have one or two pumpkins for sale in October. This year I had to go on a pumpkin hunt. I found one at a flower shop several stops from our station. I had to carry it home in my shopping bag. I sat on the train with this big round bag on my lap. It was really heavy! I almost had to roll it home! I had to carry it with both hands because I was afraid the straps would break. We wouldn't want to eat pumpkin pie for Halloween! People noticed me. They looked and smiled when they saw the orange pumpkin sticking out the top of my bag. My neighbor said, "Oh, it's Halloween." Japan has changed a lot.


It's the biggest pumpkin we've ever had in Japan. I put a deck of American playing cards next to it so you could tell how big it is. The flower shop clerk decorated it with black tape. The "X" near the top means that this pumpkin was hit over the head. An "X" is used in cartoons, too.




I bought these cookies for Little Brother and Big Sister's snack. The party is tomorrow. The cookies are from Viet Nam.
Posted by Picasa

October 20, 2008

Halloween at Disneyland

 

Aunt went to Disneyland for an office trip. She brought back souvenirs for us. This is the seasonal shopping bag. We went at Halloween many years ago. Young children dressed up in costumes. The park and the rides were decorated. There were many Halloween souvenirs. Click here to find out about Halloween at Disneyland.

Click here to find out about seasonal events at Disney Resort.


Posted by Picasa

February 14, 2007

Valentine's Day


Some coffee shops and restaurants served special things for Valentine's Day.









This coffee shop had some special "drinks which make you happy."











Remember the big Halloween pumpkin that was painted white and made into a snowman for Christmas? Well, it was still outside the cake shop. It was wearing a hat with hearts on it! The shop's window was decorated for Valentine's Day, too.



This shop was having a sale on chocolate. The yellow lettering says "balentain se-lu" (Valentine sale) in katakana, the script used for foreign words.



Baskin Robbins, known as "31", was decorated too.

Kids Web Japan--Valentine's Day

Kids Web Japan-- katakana

November 13, 2006

Christmas Has Been Coming



Christmas decorations appeared in our area stores on the weekend before Halloween this year. Can you tell what this snowman is made of? It was made out of something left over from Halloween.



Two pumpkins! This snowman was made out of two pumpkins that were painted white. It was outside a cake shop. The sign advertises a cake set for 600 yen. These pictures were taken two weeks ago, so the snowman is probably gone now.



A whole scaffold was built to put these decorations up. Two men were putting up lights under a covered walkway. It leads to a department store from a train station.



The decorations get bigger and brighter every year. Now they are everywhere, too. Our house used to be the only one in our neighborhood decorated with lights. About five years ago, we were a little late putting them out. The neighbors started asking about them. Big Sister came in from school and said her friend's mother was waiting for our lights.

A girl from Little Brother's class lives across the street in an apartment building. She told Little Brother that she and her mother like to sit and have tea and look at our lights. We try to put them up at the beginning of December. In recent years, there are several houses in our neighborhood that decorate with lights. They put them up much earlier than we do, but they haven't started to decorate yet this year.

November 01, 2006

Octopus Trap


This was outside under the deck for years. I thought it was a vase when Jiji first showed it to me. He said rope was tied around it and put in the water. Octopus would go in because they like dark places. It would be pulled up out of the water hopefully with the octopus still inside.


I put dried bay branches in it. We decorated them with spider webs and plastic pumpkins. We used it for a Halloween decoration. We also had a plastic inflatable octopus that was a hoop game. We played it at the party. Guests asked, "Why tako, octopus?" They thought it was funny that we think an octopus is scary.

October 31, 2006

Happy Halloween!


Look at the broom! It is nothing out of the ordinary here in Japan. Workers use them on the streets here. This one is huge. It is as tall as I am. I am 5'6". The bristles are as high as my waist. Actually, this one is extraordinarily large. It must be industrial size!

We had a party in our garden last weekend. Twelve children came. They bobbed for apples. They dressed up in costumes from our costume chest, and they hit a pinata. They also ate a lot.

I had bought this pumpkin a few days before. At the party, I cut open the top of the pumpkin. I asked, "Who wants to pull the top off?" Everyone wanted to! They did junken, or rock, scissors, paper to decide who would get to do it. Then they each wanted to scoop out the seeds from inside. They lined up and took turns. They washed their hands at the garden sink afterwards. They each carved one or two parts of a jack o' lantern's face. This pumpkin ended up with four faces!

They went to a nearby park to play dodgebee (with a soft frisbee). It was getting dark (around 5:00) so I went down to give them glowing bracelets. I had bought them for the kids to wear home. Everyone had fun. Three kids had never been to a Halloween party.

October 28, 2006

Street Workers' Carts

No one was in sight. This cart was on the side of the street. There were tools on the cart. There were also traffic cones. There was a twig broom, too. It looks like a witch's broom, doesn't it? We'll use one for a Halloween decoration.

October 24, 2006

Pet Dishes and Another Japanese Halloween Store Display

These are pet dishes.



This is a Halloween display at another hardware store. There are more Halloween displays in my area this year. They are getting bigger, too. There are more Halloween items for sale now.

October 18, 2006

Toys "R" Us Fuchu, Japan

I thought you might like to see the sign and the entrance to this store. It is a familiar sight in North America. There aren't very many of them here in Japan. They are few and far between.



This one is in the basement of a shopping complex. You can go by elevator or escalator. Here is the view from the escalator. They have a lot of American toys (made in China) but most are Japanese.



Here is their Halloween display. It is rather small compared to the ones in the States, but it is much bigger than it was last year. Halloween is growing in popularity here.

October 09, 2006

Games You Can Play

Look who was waddling stiff-legged around the game center.


For 200 yen, you could try once to get one just like him. For 500 yen, you get 3 tries.



For another 100 yen, you can try to get a plastic mascot to hang from your school bag.


And then there's Pooh dressed up for Halloween. This is only a sampling of the games you can play at a game center.


Today was the official Sports Day, a day when schools all over Japan hold sports events. The schools in our area, however, alternate between May and October. This school year, they had their sports day in May. Check the archives of May2006 for the postings about Sports Day.

It would have been a beautiful day for Sports Day. It was pretty quiet in the neighborhood today. It was a three day weekend, so the neighborhood seemed empty.

October 07, 2006

It's Beginning To Look More Like Halloween

Here is a sweet pumpkin! I have mentioned before in an earlier post that people here give you the "Peace" sign when their picture is taken.




Big sister and I went shopping today. We had fun looking at Halloween decorations. Halloween displays have been in some stores since the end of September. The displays are small, but they're everywhere. In the last five years, Halloween has become more popular in Tokyo. I'm not sure about other parts of Japan.

Little by little over the years, more decorations have become available. Orange pumpkins of varying sizes can now be found. Big sister, Little Brother, and I used to use kaki, persimmons, to make little jack-o-lanterns. They were easy to cut. We took them down to the entrance and lit them for a while. Baba and Jiji came to look and enjoy them with us.

Today at this store, two salespeople were dressed in costumes. They were giving candy to children. They were happy to have their pictures taken.

P.S. This year, there were very few displays for jugoya, the day to honor the full moon. I was surprised.