Collection: All Kintsugi Works

Every Encounter, Unrepeatable

This is our complete archive — every kintsugi piece we have created, past and present. Many works have already found their homes and are no longer available.

In Japanese tea tradition, ichigo ichie means "one encounter, never repeated." A vessel breaks in its own way, at its own moment — and when restored with natural urushi lacquer and gold, it becomes something that can never exist again. This is why we cannot restock or recreate any piece. Each restoration takes about four months by hand, and new works are released on an irregular basis.

Looking for a piece you can acquire today?

Browse Available Authentic Kintsugi Pieces

  • A Japanese artisan restoring a blue matcha bowl with natural urushi lacquer, carefully joining broken ceramic fragments in the traditional Kintsugi method.

    Urushi Lacquer Craftsmanship

    Restored in Japan with natural urushi, each piece is built through layered lacquer and careful polishing using time-honored methods. You can also view a short restoration video on every product page.

  • A lacquer artist painting delicate petal motifs with a maki-e brush inside a white floral matcha bowl, combining decorative urushi art with Kintsugi restoration.

    Kintsugi’s Artful Finishes

    We restore classical Kintsugi using pure gold, but also finish pieces in silver or colored urushi to best suit each vessel. To enrich the expression, we may decorate using lacquer arts such as raden or maki-e, giving each scar renewed character and imperfect beauty.

  • Hand holding a restored Oribe-style matcha bowl with authentic urushi Kintsugi, photographed beneath cherry blossoms—highlighting Japanese artistry and the quiet beauty of renewal.

    Ethically Sourced & Food-Safe

    Each piece begins as a valuable vessel—damaged yet worth preserving. Ethically sourced and carefully restored with natural urushi using traditional methods, made food-safe for daily use.

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Gold powder being delicately sprinkled onto an Aka-raku Kyoto tea bowl during the kintsugi finishing stage—capturing the luminous moment where urushi, 24K gold, and Japanese artistry converge.

The Art Behind Every Restoration

Each restored vessel carries its own quiet story—shaped by skilled hands, natural materials, and the passage of time. Thoughtfully renewed to be lived with, not just admired.

Explore the World of Kintsugi