Try contacting Mio Shapely via this site:
http://www.paperclip.org.uk/Business/japanese_tea_ceremony.htm
If you mean how many people are invited to an average formal tea ceremony, the answer is between 2 and 5.If you mean how many people practice tea ceremony, the answer is probably in the millions.
What is commonly called by the English as the Japanese Tea Ceremony is called sado or chado (line over o's) or way of the tea or chanyou, literally hot water for tea in Japanese. The tea served at this is green tea. More info on this can be found on Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under Japanese Tea Ceremony.
Matcha, which is powdered green tea. You may also be served some other kind of tea before the ceremony begins (while waiting for the other guests to arrive), plus sake during the meal portion of the ceremony.
The wedding ceremony is about to begin. She wants to attend the graduation ceremony. When her friends met for the first time, she performed the ceremony of proper introductions.
no
Yes.
In Scotland at the University of St Andrews.
zero Scotland did not attend as a country and went as part of GB
Only on TV. You need to be invited to attend the ceremony.
you must attend the ceremony of the building of the sub and thenyou will go into base and that's it you must attend the ceremony of the building of the sub and thenyou will go into base and that's it
The is absolutely no reason why a Japanese person cannot attend ANZAC Day, as long as that person treats the commemoration with respect.
To attend a basic (~30 minute) demonstration will be anything from free to $25 US dollars. Attendance at a full, 4.5-hour formal tea ceremony is usually by invitation, and so is free. I can't imagine what you'd have to pay to attend one (if such a thing were even possible, which I doubt), but given the amount of work involved it would probably be in the hundreds of dollars. To host a formal tea ceremony, assuming you already own all the necessary clothing and equipment, will probably cost at least $50-$100 US.