Ken and Michie - January 8  2026

A Quiet Beginning — Welcoming 2026

A New Year Shaped by Continuity, Refinement, and Devotion to Japanese Lacquer Art

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Photo by Yuko Aoki

As we welcome 2026, we return to the workbench with renewed focus. The turning of the year does not mark an end, but a continuation of patiently moving hands, slowly responding materials, and stories unfolding over time. With gratitude for all who have walked with us, we would like to share how we will begin this new chapter.

A Growing Circle of Urushi Lacquer Artists

Over the past year, four urushi lacquer artists have joined The Kintsugi Labo JAPAN, quietly expanding the range of voices and possibilities within our studio.
Among them are Kyoto City University of Arts graduates who specialized in urushi lacquer, as well as a nationally certified master of traditional lacquer craftsmanship. Their expertise enables us to transcend conventional restoration by creating artistically adorned kintsugi pieces that can only be made here.These pieces unite traditional kintsugi with refined urushi decoration, incorporating subtle maki-e details, layered lacquer expression, and painterly restraint.
Rather than overpowering the vessel, such adornment enhances its original atmosphere, deepens the presence of past damage, and transforms the scars into a more expressive landscape.

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This is not decoration for embellishment's sake. It is kintsugi guided by lacquer artists, where restoration and artistic sensibility coexist.
As we enter 2026, the dialogue between traditional repair and urushi artistry continues to evolve. Alongside classic kintsugi pieces, we invite you to discover these unique artistic kintsugi works, where each vessel's history and character are brought into sharper focus through lacquer.

A Mark of Trust: Renewing Our Certificate Seal

Last year, we commissioned Kouko Saito, a Japanese calligrapher and third-generation seal engraver from Shiga, to design a new seal for our certificates of authenticity. He trained for six years in Osaka and was awarded the Gold Prize at the 2001 National Skills Grand Prix. His work bridges traditional hanko engraving and calligraphic expression. His seals embody quiet authority, lineage, and care.

Though modest in appearance, the seal carries great responsibility. Exclusively designed for our atelier, it is pressed onto each certificate of authenticity and, more discreetly, onto the inside of the paulownia box lid. The seal serves as a subtle mark of authorship and care, connecting each piece to its creator, the philosophy that guided its restoration, and the hands that shaped it. This renewal reflects our belief that even the smallest details deserve intention because true trust is often formed in such details.

An Exchange Beyond Borders

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Last year, we welcomed a kintsugi apprentice from London to Mr. Suginaka's lacquering studio for a short time.
Although brief, our time together was guided by a desire to share the traditional kintsugi techniques and a deeper understanding of urushi lacquer, including its patience, discipline, and quiet strength.
We hoped this knowledge would live on beyond Japan. Seeing these values resonate across cultures reminded us that true transmission is about dialogue and trust, not imitation. Encounters like this continue to shape our perception of our role as makers and careful stewards of a living tradition.

Looking Ahead — Kintsugi, and Beyond

Continuing Kintsugi Practice
Kintsugi remains at the heart of our work.
Currently, we are carefully restoring over 50 vessels, some of which are still in progress, using urushi lacquer and precious metals such as 24K gold. Each piece has its own history, and we look forward to sharing these renewed works with you as they find their next life.

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Introducing Contemporary Urushi Art
In addition to the kintsugi pieces, we plan to start offering contemporary urushi artwork this year.These pieces highlight the characteristics of urushi lacquer, showcasing it not only as a restoration technique, but also as an artistic medium.Surface, depth, and silence are expressed through the urushi lacquer itself.Through kintsugi and beyond, we hope to provide a clearer view of the broader Japanese urushi lacquer art landscape.

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Lacquer Artwork by Keiko Hata

The year ahead calls for attentiveness rather than haste.While kintsugi remains central to our practice, it also paves the way for a deeper understanding of urushi artistry.In 2026, we will redesign our website to make it more accessible, guiding those new to kintsugi toward a deeper appreciation of the expressive potential of urushi lacquer.

We are often asked why we work so slowly when restoring broken vessels.
Our answer remains unchanged: Some values can only be revealed over time.

Thank you for being part of this journey.
We look forward to sharing what unfolds in 2026.

Shop our timeless Kintsugi pottery

Dark gray Arita matcha bowl with bold kintsugi lines in 24K gold crossing its minimalist surface, wabi-sabi in restrained form.
Profile of a dark gray Arita matcha bowl, its minimalist silhouette crossed by kintsugi gold, beauty in imperfection defined.
Bold 24K gold kintsugi seams mark this angle of the Arita bowl, each line tracing fracture with living philosophy.
The gray glaze of this Arita matcha bowl deepens under soft light, kintsugi gold warm against its calm surface, slow craft visible.
Light rests gently on the kintsugi seams of this Arita bowl, gold reflecting against dark porcelain, tactile history in view.
Inside the Arita bowl, urushi lacquer holds warmth beneath the gray glaze, kintsugi seams glowing with cultural heritage.
Kintsugi lines converge within this Arita matcha bowl, gold paths mapping where fractures met urushi, philosophy in form.
Texture and depth emerge in the kintsugi repair of this gray Arita bowl, urushi layers visible, enduring legacy beneath gold.
Looking into the gray Arita bowl from above, kintsugi seams radiate across the interior, a quiet beauty held in circular stillness.
The foot ring of this Arita kintsugi bowl grounds the piece, dark glaze meeting bare clay, history made visible at the base.
This gray Arita kintsugi matcha bowl shown with scale reference, bold gold lines crossing its minimalist form, crafted resilience in proportion.
Morning calm on tatami as the dark Arita kintsugi bowl rests in stillness, gold seams quiet in soft light, mindful luxury at rest.
Dark gray Arita matcha bowl with bold kintsugi lines in 24K gold crossing its minimalist surface, wabi-sabi in restrained form.
The kintsugi restoration of this Arita bowl unfolds, urushi and gold applied with patience, a second life taking form.
Profile of a dark gray Arita matcha bowl, its minimalist silhouette crossed by kintsugi gold, beauty in imperfection defined.
The dark Arita matcha bowl turns slowly, kintsugi seams in 24K gold appearing from every angle, visible resilience in motion.
Bold 24K gold kintsugi seams mark this angle of the Arita bowl, each line tracing fracture with living philosophy.
The gray glaze of this Arita matcha bowl deepens under soft light, kintsugi gold warm against its calm surface, slow craft visible.
Light rests gently on the kintsugi seams of this Arita bowl, gold reflecting against dark porcelain, tactile history in view.
Inside the Arita bowl, urushi lacquer holds warmth beneath the gray glaze, kintsugi seams glowing with cultural heritage.
Kintsugi lines converge within this Arita matcha bowl, gold paths mapping where fractures met urushi, philosophy in form.
Texture and depth emerge in the kintsugi repair of this gray Arita bowl, urushi layers visible, enduring legacy beneath gold.
Looking into the gray Arita bowl from above, kintsugi seams radiate across the interior, a quiet beauty held in circular stillness.
The foot ring of this Arita kintsugi bowl grounds the piece, dark glaze meeting bare clay, history made visible at the base.
This gray Arita kintsugi matcha bowl shown with scale reference, bold gold lines crossing its minimalist form, crafted resilience in proportion.
Morning calm on tatami as the dark Arita kintsugi bowl rests in stillness, gold seams quiet in soft light, mindful luxury at rest.
A tall Kyoto mug stands with sculptural presence, gold kintsugi seams threading through hand-painted florals, a philosophy of care made visible.
Gold kintsugi seams glow faintly against the mug's interior, each mended line a testament to crafted resilience.
Looking into the mug from above, kintsugi lines converge like quiet rivers, marking where fractures became history made visible.
The unglazed foot ring reveals the earthenware beneath, grounding this kintsugi mug in centuries of Kyoto ceramic tradition.
Hand-painted florals bloom inside this kintsugi mug, brushwork carrying the quiet beauty of a Kyoto garden.
Resting on tatami, this kintsugi mug holds tea and morning light, an invitation to pause within intentional living.
Scale reference shows the kintsugi mug's generous proportions, its tall form designed for daily ritual.
A tall Kyoto mug stands with sculptural presence, gold kintsugi seams threading through hand-painted florals, a philosophy of care made visible.
Hands apply urushi lacquer with patience, then gold, the art of kintsugi giving this Kyoto mug its second life.
Gold kintsugi seams glow faintly against the mug's interior, each mended line a testament to crafted resilience.
The Kyoto mug turns slowly, revealing gold kintsugi lines winding through painted florals, a soulful object in motion.
Looking into the mug from above, kintsugi lines converge like quiet rivers, marking where fractures became history made visible.
The unglazed foot ring reveals the earthenware beneath, grounding this kintsugi mug in centuries of Kyoto ceramic tradition.
Hand-painted florals bloom inside this kintsugi mug, brushwork carrying the quiet beauty of a Kyoto garden.
Resting on tatami, this kintsugi mug holds tea and morning light, an invitation to pause within intentional living.
Scale reference shows the kintsugi mug's generous proportions, its tall form designed for daily ritual.
Early Noritake cup and saucer with 24K gold kintsugi seams tracing mended fractures, Art Deco florals beneath.
Inside this Noritake kintsugi cup, gold traces the journey from broken to whole—food-safe for daily ritual.
Gold kintsugi lines thread across ivory Noritake porcelain, each seam a quiet meditation on renewal.
Warm light catches 24K gold kintsugi where vintage Noritake was mended, history made luminous.
Detail of kintsugi repair on Art Deco Noritake: fragments reunited with museum-quality precision.
Looking into this Noritake kintsugi cup reveals gold threads marking where porcelain found its second story.
The underside of a Noritake kintsugi cup, gold seams visible even here—restoration without compromise.
Hand-painted gold florals encircle this Noritake kintsugi saucer, Art Deco elegance preserved through time.
The Noritake backstamp authenticates this kintsugi porcelain, heritage marked beneath the restored saucer.
Early Noritake kintsugi cup rests on tatami, gold seams glowing softly—tea as philosophy made tangible.
Scale reference shows this Noritake kintsugi set's delicate proportions, sized for mindful afternoons.
Early Noritake cup and saucer with 24K gold kintsugi seams tracing mended fractures, Art Deco florals beneath.
Four months of urushi and gold kintsugi transform this Art Deco Noritake into living philosophy.
Inside this Noritake kintsugi cup, gold traces the journey from broken to whole—food-safe for daily ritual.
This Noritake kintsugi cup turns slowly, revealing 24K gold seams that map its story of enduring grace.
Gold kintsugi lines thread across ivory Noritake porcelain, each seam a quiet meditation on renewal.
Warm light catches 24K gold kintsugi where vintage Noritake was mended, history made luminous.
Detail of kintsugi repair on Art Deco Noritake: fragments reunited with museum-quality precision.
Looking into this Noritake kintsugi cup reveals gold threads marking where porcelain found its second story.
The underside of a Noritake kintsugi cup, gold seams visible even here—restoration without compromise.
Hand-painted gold florals encircle this Noritake kintsugi saucer, Art Deco elegance preserved through time.
The Noritake backstamp authenticates this kintsugi porcelain, heritage marked beneath the restored saucer.
Early Noritake kintsugi cup rests on tatami, gold seams glowing softly—tea as philosophy made tangible.
Scale reference shows this Noritake kintsugi set's delicate proportions, sized for mindful afternoons.

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