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On the plaza of Lincoln Center until Monday, there’s a Japanese artisan village set up in conjunction with Heisei Nakamura-za revival of a rarely performed 19th-century kabuki ghost story at the Rose Theater. Built of wooden stalls in Japanese nagaya style—traditional bungalows built in rows–artisans are making specialty crafts on the spot. These include Nihon Ningyo (hand-painted dolls), Tenugui (fine cotton towels), Kanzashi (hair ornaments). There’s also a fun display of sake barrels.

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The dolls are particularly impressive, and according to the Lincoln Center website:

The dolls being sold are intricately constructed using 74 separate steps, beginning with the fabrication of the body made of wood sawdust strengthened by rice glue, a head shaped by chisels, eyes made of glass, and many coatings of paste made from powdered oyster or clam shells to produce the right sheen. Each doll is dressed in a tiny kimono made from antique kimono fabric.

Other vendors are making beautiful fans, art prints and paper.

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Get in touch with the author @untappedmich. See more quirky NYC facts and discoveries in our “Daily What?!” series. Submit your own via Twitter with the hashtag #DailyWhat.