Traditional Artisanship Meets Modern Design: Tokyo's Best Gifts with a Twist

By Time Out Tokyo
August 27,2016
Time Out Tokyo

Time Out Tokyo is the Tokyo edition of Time Out, a London-based global media group covering 108 cities in 39 countries, from New York to Shanghai and Kuala Lumpur.

Arita pottery always makes for a great gift – and the traditional wares are now beautifully designed, too
This article originally appeared on Time Out Tokyo

Traditional Japanese crafts make great gifts, but finding the right cup, tea pot or bowl to take home can be a quest in itself. There's no going wrong with the five places featured below, all of which put a fresh spin on time-honoured craftsmanship. And if you're looking for more souvenir ideas, check out our lists of the best Tokyo souvenirs and our essential souvenir picks.

The top five designer crafts

1616 / Arita Japan

Colour Porcelain Deep Plate, large (5,500 yen), medium (3,000 yen) or small (800 yen). Mug, pink (2,300 yen) or blue (¥2,000)

These ceramics are made in the town of Arita, in the heart of Saga prefecture and the birthplace of Japanese pottery. 1616 has brought these traditional pots, plates and cups bang up to date with intricate designs by Dutch designers Scholten & Baijings. 

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Location: Otemachi


Cement Produce Design x Kisso

Sabae ear pick, 3,900 yen

Ear picking is the Japanese technique of, well, picking your ear clean. While having someone poke around in your inner canal might not be for everyone, these beautiful glorified Q-tips, made of the same material as Sabae glass frames, make great gifts.

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Location: Aoyama
 

Owanya Uchida

Urushiwan (wooden bowl), 4,800 yen

These bowls are made from natural shirk trees, finished with layers of lacquer that help them survive years of daily use. Traditionally they only come in deep red, but Owanya Uchida have embraced diversity – meaning there are plenty of other colours to choose from.

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Location: Nihonbashi 
 

Kuroco

Stripe Old, 25,000 yen

Meet Kuroco, the new face of traditional Edo Kiriko glassware. This store, in business for well over 80 years, collaborates with veteran craftspeople to create black Edo Kiriko, supposedly the most difficult variety to master. The results are spectacular.

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Location: Okachimachi

 

Hasami

Block mug, 1,500 yen

Ceramics brand Hasami hails from a town of the same name in Nagasaki prefecture. The brand's signature mug combines the area's traditional craftsmanship with a design inspired by American diners of the '50s and '60s.

 Buy it here

 

 

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