Weathered Wooden Chairs Traditional Japanese Interior Black And White | Limited Edition of 10
Aged Wooden Chairs Beneath Traditional Japanese Windows I photographed this scene while exploring a traditional structure in Ishikawa Prefecture, Japan, and what immediately caught my attention was the quiet repetition running through the frame. Five old wooden chairs. A long, rough table. Worn plaster walls. Dark window frames hold decades of use inside their surfaces. Nothing dramatic was happening here, yet the entire room carried a sense of patience that I rarely find outside older parts of Japan. The texture is what stayed with me most. Every chair tells a slightly different story through the scratches, fading wood grain, and uneven wear along the edges. Some lean subtly. Some sit straighter. Together, they feel human without needing people in the photograph itself. The long table cuts across the composition, almost like a visual anchor, guiding the eye through the frame while emphasizing the wood's age and craftsmanship. Black and white was the only way I wanted to present this image. Color would have distracted from the structure, texture, and balance that make the photograph work. Removing color allows the grain of the wood, the contrast in the plaster, and the layered tones in the shadows to become the subject themselves. The image becomes less about documenting a room and more about atmosphere and memory. I spent time walking through these older locations carefully, paying attention to corners and details that most visitors quickly move past. Japan has an incredible ability to preserve spaces that still feel connected to everyday life rather than staged for tourism. This room felt authentic. Used and quietly lived in. That honesty matters to me when I photograph interiors like this. This piece works especially well in spaces that lean toward natural materials and understated design. Offices, reading rooms, modern minimalist interiors, cabins, and quiet living spaces all benefit from imagery that carries texture without becoming visually loud. The long horizontal composition also gives the image a calming rhythm when displayed larger on a wall. I personally sign each limited-edition print, and each includes a certificate of authenticity. The photograph is produced using archival pigment inks on museum-quality materials designed for long-term display and collector presentation. There is also something timeless about old furniture photographed this way. These chairs could belong to another decade entirely, yet the image still feels current because the shapes, textures, and imperfections remain relatable. Good still life photography often comes from ordinary subjects arranged naturally over time rather than created artificially for the camera. That is exactly what drew me to this scene. Explore more from my Still Life Wall Art collection. © Dan Kosmayer, 2025
Specifications
- Select Dimensions
- 8 x 10 inches, 11 x 14 inches, 12 x 16 inches, 16 x 20 inches, 20 x 24 inches, 24 x 30 inches, 30 x 40 inches, A4 (21 x 29.7 cm), A3 (29.7 x 42 cm), A2 (42 x 59.4 cm), A1 (59.4 x 84.1 cm)
Variants (11)
- 8 x 10 inches — 79.00 CAD — In stock
- 11 x 14 inches — 119.00 CAD — In stock
- 12 x 16 inches — 149.00 CAD — In stock
- 16 x 20 inches — 199.00 CAD — In stock
- 20 x 24 inches — 269.00 CAD — In stock
- 24 x 30 inches — 349.00 CAD — In stock
- 30 x 40 inches — 429.00 CAD — In stock
- A4 (21 x 29.7 cm) — 79.00 CAD — In stock
- A3 (29.7 x 42 cm) — 149.00 CAD — In stock
- A2 (42 x 59.4 cm) — 269.00 CAD — In stock
- A1 (59.4 x 84.1 cm) — 429.00 CAD — In stock
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