IDENTIFICATION OF WOMAN MASKS


To the uninitiated eye, the faces of the various young and
middle-aged woman masks seem almost exactly the same.
However, a closer look will reveal
distinctly different hairline types
that act as distinguishing marks between them.


KO-OMOTE

Three comparatively broad strands run parallel to each other
all the way along the hairline from the part in the middle
of the forehead down to the bottom.

Koomote hairline




WAKA-ONNA and ZO-ONNA

The hairlines of these two types of mask are almost identical.
Thus the two types can only be differentiated by observing the texture of the skin,
the lines around the eyes and the relative fullness of flatness of the cheeks.
The Waka-onna is younger than the Zo-onna.
Their hairlines divide into three distinct sections.
The upper section, beginning at the middle of the forehead, has two strands
that run parallel to each other. The middle section consists of three or four
short strands at the level of the temple.
The lower section from the temple to the bottom of the hairline is made
up of three strands.

Koomote hairline


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