Cat Therapy Day at Neco Republic
A Sunday trip to visit a rescue cat cafe in Ochanomizu. Neco Republic is warm clean space where the cats seem to be very well cared for. Cute cats are everywhere, some shy and some friendly. Most of them are found or abandoned pets and some are in pretty rough shape. We spent just over an hour there to recharge our cat batteries.
Both of us have cats at home and we both admitted to missing them right away. Luckily, Tokyo has a large number of cat cafes to warm travellers hearts. I am not sure about the ethics of keeping animals in shops for customers entertainment, especially fragile pets like reptiles. Even cats, though domesticated, need their peace and quiet. You have to respect that part of their nature, so I wasn’t sure about cat cafes either. But, we did our research and this place seemed to really put the cats needs first.











Look here if you would like to book a visit. And if you like cat cafes, check out this post about another one in Tokyo.
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Jimbocho Book Town
Jimbocho book town in Chiyoda is the centre for used book sellers and publishing houses in Toyko. Vintage books, prints, magazines, antiques, pornography and movie memorabilia shops spread over a few city blocks.

Jimbocho is also home to a few shops that specialize film production promo prints, original posters and photographs. In a tiny crowded shop called Vintage Jinbocho, I found this beautiful post card of Wong Kar Wai’s “Days of Being Wild”. It has the signature green tint of the original film. You can find Japanese language promotional items for films from all over the world including Hollywood releases. Of course, there are also plenty of promo materials for Japanese films, something that is difficult to find elsewhere. Here is the link to Vintage Jinbocho.



You will see both JiNbocho and JiMbocho used in English spellings. Both are correct.
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Camera and Recording Gear
A few people have asked about the camera and recording gear I am using. The camera is a Fujifilm X100T. It’s a 10 year old, 16MP mirrorless viewfinder style digital camera made in Japan. Pretty old technology by today’s standards but I love the images that come out of it. I don’t do any post processing or editing. I set the camera how I like it and whatever comes out, I use it as is. In other words, I use JPG files right out of the camera, instead of shooting RAW files and post processing. There is nothing wrong with post processing photos. I just don’t enjoy doing it.

The controls are mostly buttons and dials and it feels just like a film camera. It has a fixed focal length lens, so there is no zooming in close or pulling back for big wide angles. Instead, you have to move your body closer to your subject or reframe your subject in a different way to get an interesting shot. So, in a lot of ways, it is a very limiting camera. It is capable of taking a great picture, but it’s up to the photographer to do most of the work. Here is a link to their latest model. The camera I am using now is available used for much less and is still excellent.

Sound Recording
For sound recording, I am using this little Sony PCM A-10 digital recorder and a pair of Micbooster “Clippy” stereo microphones. The Sony recorder is tiny and records in WAV files which are higher than CD quality. The tiny microphones are the style that you would clip on someones clothes if you were interviewing them. They are hand built by a small company in the UK. The microphone capsules are incredibly sensitive and make no self-noise (hissing). I have them inside these fuzzy wind-bubbles to keep wind noise to a minimum. In the right conditions, the recordings are incredibly alive and detailed. I am not sure that Sony still makes these recorders but if not, they can be found used.

When I am out recording in the city, I clip the microphones to a strap on top of my backpack and stuff the Sony into a pocket inside

The Sony recorder connects to my phone via Bluetooth and through the app, I can monitor and control all of the most important functions from my iPhone while the recorder itself is in my backpack somewhere. It is a lot of fun to record daily travels and listen back later. The memories elicited by sound are different and sometimes more vivid than those that come from looking at pictures.

When I post photos and sounds, the website software crushes and compresses them so that they fit on the website and load at a certain usable speed. The actual photo files and sound files are far more detailed and nuanced but I still think they look and sound pretty good on here. I hope you enjoy them.
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