A class of mounting for hanging scrolls *kakemono 掛物, that was originally transmitted from China, with the other class being referred to as *yamato hyōgu 大和表具. Types of bunjin hyōgu include *fukuro hyōgu 袋表具, *mikiri hyōgu 見切表具, *minchō shitate 明朝仕立, and chūgoku hyōgu 中国表具. The bunjin hyōgu appeared in Japan as a result of the interest in Ming and Qing painting during the Edo period. A typical mounting consists of the major elements of honshi 本紙 (the area of the painting or calligraphy itself), *ichimonji 一文字, and *chūberi 中縁, with a special characteristic being the presence of a single section of cloth or paper that entirely surrounds the honshi. Types of bunjin hyōgu also can have minchō, an edging or border attached to the outside edges of the right and left vertical strips, hashira 柱 or heri 縁, of the mounting.