
Create a Bespoke Flower Vase with a Living National Treasure of Yamanaka Woodturning near Kanazawa
Overview
Enjoy a private visit with Living National Treasure Ryozo Kawagita at Kawakita Kobo, available exclusively through this premium plan. Create a unique flower vase under his observation and supervision, before entrusting your work to the master for traditional fuki-urushi and mokume chinkin finishing. By repeatedly applying and wiping natural lacquer, fuki-urushi enhances the depth, luster, and natural character of the wood, while mokume chinkin accentuates the grain with delicate gold inlay. The completed vase is then shipped to you at a later date, transformed into a unique collaborative work imbued with the artistry and legacy of a Living National Treasure.
Key Features
- Enjoy a private visit to Kawakita Kobo, a workshop preserving generations of Yamanaka woodturning tradition, and meet Living National Treasure Ryozo Kawagita
- Create a one-of-a-kind flower vase that becomes a collaborative work with the master, then receive it after it has been finished with fuki-urushi and mokume chinkin
- Experience the artistic value of fuki-urushi lacquer finishing and mokume chinkin gold inlay, techniques that enhance the wood's depth, luster, and natural beauty
- Learn how artisans read the wood, prepare their tools and materials, and shape vessels on a lathe through traditional Yamanaka woodturning techniques
*Visitors may also be interested in these other similar plans:
Kanazawa
120 mins
from $4,451 /person
Private: 1 - 8
English-speaking guide included
Cancel free up to 4 days prior
Details
Forest, River, and Hot Springs – Woodturning Traditions of Yamanaka Onsen
Kawakita Kobo is firmly rooted in the Yamanaka Onsen area of Kaga, Ishikawa Prefecture, a region known for its lacquerware and a tradition of exceptional woodturning said to reach back some four and a half centuries. In this experience, enter this family workshop and encounter the craft at its source.

Yamanaka’s woodturning tradition is deeply connected to the landscape and its history. Woodworkers first moved into its mountainous areas from neighboring Fukui in search of better material. Over time, their products made their way downstream to the nearby hot-springs resort town, where visitors began buying them as souvenirs of their visit. Over time, this craft became a cornerstone of Yamanaka lacquerware.

Kawakita Kobo carries this tradition forward through a family line of artisans. The studio achieved legendary status through the work of Ryozo Kawagita, son of its founder Koichi Kawagita.* Ryozo helped to push woodturning beyond production of everyday items into works of artistic expression. For his efforts, Ryozo was recognized in 1994 as a Living National Treasure**. Today, the workshop continues to balance a heritage of skill, design sensibility, and deep respect for the life of wood.
*Note: The readings “Kawagita” and “Kawakita” are, respectively, old-fashioned and modernized readings of the same Japanese characters. The Kawakita family used the former reading up to Ryozo, and uses the latter reading from his son Hirohiko onward.
**The term “Living National Treasure” (“Ningen Kokuho”) is a popular term for referring to those officially listed by Japan’s Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology as Preservers of Important Tangible Cultural Properties (“Jūyō Mukei Bunkazai Hojisha”).
The Work and Philosophy of the Kijishi
The experience begins with an introduction to Kawakita Kobo and the world of the kijishi woodturners. Guests learn how the craft developed in Ishikawa, how Yamanaka woodturning became tied to the region’s lacquerware, and how the wooden structure of any lacquerware vessel is the foundation that has a decisive effect on the finished product. And before touching the lathe, participants first learn to see wood as a kijishi artisan does.

Kijishi do not simply cut wood into a shape. They consider the grain, how it will respond to turning, and what kind of vessel it can become. Kawakita Kobo also places high value on wood which reaches it through what the Japanese call “En” – a concept that might be described as “relationships of destiny.” This is old temple timber, shrine wood, or simply garden trees and other materials with their own special history that end up at the workshop through human relationships and which can here be given a second life that pays respect to those connections.

Kawakita Kobo sums up its guiding philosophy with the Japanese phrase “ki wo ikasu,” a phrase that might be translated as “giving life to wood.” It’s worth noting that the Japanese verb ikasu here makes no distinction between imbuing inanimate matter with life, allowing something already living to continue its life, or reviving something dead – and Kawakita Kobo uses the word in every sense. When a bowl is made, explains Ryozo’s son and third generation kijishi Hirohiko, most of the original wood becomes shavings. It is precisely because it is a process requiring the wood to sacrifice so much that the woodturner must work with gratitude, respect, and a desire for what is left to live on to the fullest.
Watch a Master Artisan at the Lathe with Handmade Tools
Before the hands-on experience, guests observe a woodturning demonstration by a Kawakita Kobo artisan. A cylindrical piece of wood is fixed to the lathe, then gradually shaped with a cutting tool against the rapidly rotating surface. In a master’s hands the work can sometimes look freeflowing and improvised, but it is in fact precise and unforgiving: each change of angle, pressure, and timing affects the shape that emerges – and per Hirohiko, “unlike pottery, we can’t reset and start over no matter what mistakes we make.”

A stunning fact of how the Kawakita Kobo kijishi work is that they don’t just make tools and works of art out of wood. They also forge, set, and maintain their own cutting tools – each to their own specifications to achieve the desired shape and feel and weight in their hands, and the techniques they wish to use them for. At Kawakita Kobo, this toolmaking is an essential part of the craft’s accumulated knowledge.

Watching them work also reveals why long training periods are required. It isn’t enough simply to be able to master the techniques of woodturning. It isn’t even enough to be a master of caring for and maintaining the tools for the job. Each woodturner must also have a proficiency in metalworking as a prerequisite to even being considered a full-fledged kijishi.
In this premium plan, guests can enjoy direct contact with the family’s current patriarch, listed Living National Treasure and Holder of Important Intangible Cultural Property Ryozo Kawagita. His observation and supervision offer a closer encounter to the history of this rare craft lineage.*
*As Ryozo Kawagita is of advanced age, his participation and involvement in the craft demonstration and instruction are subject to availability according to his physical condition on the day.
Turning Your Own Flower Vase
Move from observation to application as you take up the lathe yourself to create an ichirin-zashi, which is a traditional type of small flower vase. Under close guidance from one of the four generations of the Kawakita family of kijishi, shape the wood on the lathe from a prepared cylindrical form with an opening for the flower, shaping it with your own hands down to a curved figure that expresses your own creativity and technique.

In this premium plan, guests will work with instruction from Hirohiko or Hiroshi Kawakita, with observation by supervision by the senior Ryozo Kawagita. As a Living National Treasure who continues to develop his craft now into his 90s, Ryozo’s works are items of legendary renown in the world of wood and lacquerware craft, with each piece commanding prices in the millions of yen (tens of thousands in USD). They are also considered rare exemplars of some of the most sophisticated and difficult-to-master techniques of Japanese traditional wood and lacquer work. Recognition as a Living National Treasure denotes mastery, preservation, and continuance of techniques considered precious intangible cultural property.
Beyond creating collector’s pieces, Ryozo is also entrusted with the production of sacred artifacts: such as shrine treasures for the famed Shikinen Sengu renewal ceremony at Ise Main Shrine. This is a rare opportunity to learn directly from a preeminent master about his techniques and craft philosophy, and to contribute to the continuance of the art form he represents through direct support and by learning some of it for yourself.

In this premium plan, your completed vase is entrusted to Kawakita Kobo after the end of the experience for natural lacquer finishing using traditional Yamanaka techniques. Fuki-urushi lacquer finishing brings out the wood’s depth and luster, while mokume chinkin gold inlay highlights and enhances the natural beauty of the grain. In the hands of the masters, your handiwork is imbued with the craftwork beauty and connection to tradition of a Living National Treasure.
A Vessel That Carries the Memory of Your Hands
Though the finished vase is small enough to bring home and designed to hold only a small arrangement, it can nonetheless also carry the full scale of the memory of your encounter. The sound of the lathe, the scent of the fresh wood, the texture of the tools in hand, and the moment when your block of wood first began to take shape as a vessel are all apt to come rushing back for years to come every time you touch its surface.
The traditional natural lacquerwork of Japan is anything but an instant-gratification process. Each layer of urushi lacquer takes days to weeks to set before the next can be applied. This is a painstaking process that in and of itself becomes part of the story and beauty of the finished work. And it adds a new dimension of discovery and excitement to the experience of creation, as you wait for your creation to be masterfully finished in traditional lacquerwork and arrive at your door transformed, embodying both your own handiwork and the meticulous finishing touches of the artisanal heritage of one of Japan’s most venerated woodworking lineages.

For travelers seeking a deeper experience of Japanese craft, Kawakita Kobo offers more than a workshop tour. It reveals the unseen foundation within all lacquerware, the craft knowledge and technique behind handmade tools, and the respect required to give wood life. And after letting you try your hand at applying that knowledge, technique, and respect for yourself, you’ll also have a chance to peruse the Kawakita Kobo workshop gallery to view and – if you so desire – purchase additional works by the family of artisans for yourself.
Kawakita Kobo

Kawakita Kobo
Kawakita Kobo is a woodturning workshop in the Yamanaka Onsen area of Kaga, Ishikawa Prefecture, deeply connected to the region’s long tradition of kijishi craftsmanship. Three generations of artisans turn wood on a lathe to produce the wooden forms that underpin Yamanaka craft lacquerware – the Kawakita family’s kijishi lineage has been recognized at the highest echelons of craft and art with the recognition of second-generation woodturner Ryozo Kawagita as a Living National Treasure and his listing as a Holder of Important Intangible Cultural Property for his work. Today, Kawakita Kobo continues through his work – as well as the work of his son Hirohiko and grandson Hiroshi, combining a heritage of technique and craft tradition with personal expression and a deep respect for the material. The family’s work is centered on the philosophy of “ki wo ikasu,” or giving wood life, and seeks to respect and draw out the beauty of its materials – especially those which reach it with deeper connections or histories that might otherwise be perceived as blemishes.
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Kawakita Kobo
Kaga City, Ishikawa
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Kanazawa
120 mins
Private: 1 - 8
English-speaking guide included
Cancel free up to 4 days prior
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