5 Cool Crafts from Tokyo
While Tokyo is known for its city lights, it's also long been a center of traditional craftsmanship. The crafts of Tokyo go back for generations, and the attention to detail that the city's dedicated craftspeople put into their work is incomparable. Check out our top five coolest crafts from Tokyo, each with its own rich, unique history!
By Japan Brand1. Edo Karakami
Edo karakami paper is a government-designated traditional craft made by adding designs and decorations to washi, Japanese handmade paper. As the name implies, it was developed in Edo (today’s Tokyo), and reflects a townspeople’s culture established by craftsmen and merchants who worked in the city during the Edo Period (1603-1868). The craft features free and fluid designs, many depicting familiar objects and scenes from daily life at the time, as well as natural subjects that give a rich sense of the seasons.
The origins of Edo karakami can be traced back to the Heian Period (794-1185), when patterned mon-toshi paper was introduced from Tang dynasty China. This paper was used as a model for the first karakami paper, which was handmade using wooden blocks engraved with designs and decorative materials such as mica powder or gofun, a whitewash made from ground shells. At first, this paper was used as eiso—paper for transcribing poetry, such as short tanka poems or haikai linked verse—but as time passed, its use spread to wallpaper, byobu room partitions, fusuma heavy sliding doors and shoji, traditional light-weight sliding doors with translucent paper screens.