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Toyama, Japan’s Craft Scene Draws Visitors to the Rural Coast for High Design

Toyama, Japan’s Craft Scene Draws Visitors to the Rural Coast for High Design


On a larger scale, homeware brand Nousaku was the first to create products made of 100% tin, an innovation driven by its fifth-generation female CEO Chiharu Nousaku. Its contemporary foundry—which also continues to cast bronze artifacts for Buddhist rituals—is open for public tours and hands-on casting workshops. There is also a café and shop beside a striking lobby installation that doubles as a library of in-use casting molds.

Further inland, Nanto lays claim to some of Japan’s finest wood carving, in the town of Inami. Japan’s mingei movement—which emerged in the 1920s, championing the folk crafts of anonymous artisans—is also deeply connected with the area, in particular Zentokuji. This 500-year-old Pure Land Buddhist temple is where mingei philosopher and leader Yanagi Sōetsu wrote an important essay on mingei, and it is possible to visit the tatami room he stayed in. The complex welcomes visitors, who can learn how to make a Buddhist nenju (rosary)—using beads from an ancient cedar cut down in the grounds—or use the serene coworking space. There is accommodation in the renovated former dojo, designed by mingei carpenter and architect Yasukawa Keiichi.

Image may contain Inoran Person Accessories Glasses Cup Woodworking Desk Furniture Table and Pen

At work in his studio in Iwase, Toyama, wood-carver Tsutomu Iwasaki hails from nearby Inami—Japan’s most famous wood carving town.

What to buy in Toyama

Tin Kago basket: The most famous product from Nousaku tin foundry is a beautiful and practical pliable-tin basket that can be transformed by bending.

Patinated copper jewelry: Masters of Takaoka copperware, Momentum Factory Orii’s workshop-adjacent shop sells jewelry made using its coloring techniques. Similar items were gifted to former first lady Jill Biden in 2024 at the Japan-US Summit.

Mother-of-pearl inlay glassware: Look out for works by Takeshi Musashigawa, a master artisan of Aogai-nuri, a distinct blue mother-of-pearl inlay unique to Takaoka City. Usually found on lacquerware, Musashigawa has created contemporary raden designs on glass, including covetable sake cups.

Sake KitKats: Available in Japan in all kinds of flavors (matcha, wasabi, sweet potato), the sake version of this ubiquitous candy bar is a collaboration with Masuizumi sake from Masuda brewery in Iwase.

Where to eat

L’évo

A two-Michelin-starred auberge in the mountains, where chef-patron Eiji Taniguchi utilizes hyperlocal ingredients—including those from his own farm or foraged in the surrounding forest—in his French-Japanese menu.

Oryouri Fujii

Bioluminescent firefly squid and translucent Toyama Bay glass shrimp are seasonal highlights of the 10-course menu at this two-Michelin-starred restaurant in Iwase by chef Hironori Fujii.

Wakana

Tatsuo Ryoke serves fine sushi at his omakase counter in Takaoka on exquisite Suze-ware bowls from Noto Peninsula, ceramics by Gaku Shakunaga, tin plates by Yoshinori Shimatani, and even Edo antiques with kintsugi repairs.

Yuinote Histoire

This rustic café-restaurant in the scattered villages is run by Hirotaka and Shiho Akita who serve seasonal vegetables and foraged sansai (mountain vegetables) alongside their homegrown rice.

Bar de Mitomi

Close to Toyama station, this bar serves food but the main event is the sake, with tipples available from all 19 of Toyama’s breweries, including IWA, created by Richard Geoffroy, formerly of Dom Pérignon. Retail sales also available.

Where to stay

Rakudo-An

A three-room luxury inn in a 120-year-old azumadachi farmhouse furnished with contemporary and mingei gems. Two percent of room fees go towards maintaining the local kainyo (house forests). A sculpture by Rei Naito, who is famous for her works on the art islands Naoshima and Teshima, has recently been installed in the garden.

Kane no Sanzun

Copper maker Yotsukawa Seisakusho has remodeled two adjacent historic shophouses in Kanaya-machi into high-end rentals that combine contemporary design and period features (even a WW2 bomb shelter in one). Tatami rooms sleep four or eight respectively, while niches showcase the company’s fine bronze castings.

Bed and Craft

Each of these six villas, renovated by master wood carvers and other craftspeople in Inami, is a work of art in its own right. Overnight guests can participate in a wood-carving print-making workshop led by one of the few female wood artisans.

Moritosha

At Zentokoji temple in Johana, what was once the dojo for monks and followers has been transformed into a simple yet elegant six-bedroom lodge offering a comfortable night’s sleep ahead of 6:30 a.m. sutra chanting.



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