Ornamental rakes known as kumade are used to obtain this concept during November’s Tori-no-ichi festival, which takes place on the Rooster Days. For 10 points each:
[10m] Name this concept, embodied by daruma dolls and feline maneki-neko statues that beckon towards passersby. A group of seven deities named for this concept include Ebisu, Hotei, and Jurojin.
ANSWER: luck [or fuku; or koūn; accept good luck; accept good fortune; accept the Seven Lucky Gods or the Seven Gods of Fortune or the shichifukujin; accept prosperity until read; accept obtaining wealth or money; accept success; reject “bad luck” or “being unlucky”]
[10e] Every New Year, the Seven Lucky Gods pilot a treasure-filled vessel of this type known as a takarabune. In Japanese folklore, either Raijin or Hachiman sent the kamikaze winds to destroy Mongol vessels of this type.
ANSWER: ships [or boats; accept fleet or navy]
[10h] In some cases, woodblock prints of takarabune would be used to induce good versions of these phenomena associated with eggplants, Mount Fuji, and hawks. A tapir-like yokai known as the baku is associated with this phenomenon.
ANSWER: dreams [or yume]
<KT, Mythology>