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Kotobuki Maneki Neko Lucky Cat Coin Bank with Karakusa Spiral Vine Pattern, Black
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Kotobuki Maneki Neko Lucky Cat Coin Bank with Karakusa Spiral Vine Pattern, Black

★★★3.0·1 ratings

Although there are several folktales about the origin of maneki neko, the most popular involves a stray cat and an impoverished shop owner. The story goes that despite being down on his luck and barely able to feed himself, the impoverished shop owner takes in a stray, hungry cat. Grateful for the shop owner's charity, the cat then takes post outside, beckoning visitors into the shop. The cat, sitting on hind legs with one paw beckoning, eventually attracts many customers and turns around the shop owner's misfortunes. The tale of maneki neko and the widespread belief across Japan of its power as a lucky charm, led ceramic artisans over the years to create different colored cat figurines to bring good luck and fortune for different occasions. This black maneki neko is said to ward of bad spirits and ensure safety. It is crafted and hand painted in Tokoname, a famous pottery area known as one of the six oldest and most important kiln sites in Japan. The contemporary colors and patterns which are intricately hand painted are a great example of Japan's next generation taking something traditional and giving it a fresh, new twist.

ASIN
B00KU1VI78
Embedding
CLIP ViT-L/14 · 768d
Distance metric
cosine
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Doc fetch goes through Layer's Aerospike pull-through cache; cache hit served the row without touching turbopuffer. The similar query asks Layer for nearest neighbors of the stored product vector — queries don't go through the doc cache, so no cache header is set.

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