
Via Spoon & Tamgo, we are referred to the latest, as yet incomplete
project by embroidery artist Tomoko Kubo to adorn and ornament all forty six characters of the hiragana lettering system (
see previously), each glyph carefully laid out to feature foods, creatures and concepts that begin with that particular character, like the pictured U kana (う in hiragana and ウ in katakana—deriving from the
kanji logograph 宇 meaning abode or territory—the former being a phonetic
syllabary and the later being a simplified version of more complex Chinese characters). Not only a work of art, they also aid in approaching the language for beginners with this colourful and creative
abecedarium: う is for rabbit (うさぎ, usagi) and for horse (うま, uma), etc. Much more at the links above.