A mesmerizing time-lapse video revealing the meticulous process of a Japanese lacquer artist, who masterfully combines traditional Kintsugi with ornate decorative techniques to give a fractured vessel a new, brilliant life.
A smooth, 360-degree rotational video of the Kintsugi vessel. As it turns, you can follow the continuous flow of the luminous 24k gold lines as they wrap around the entire piece, revealing the artwork in its full three-dimensional form.

24K Gold Kintsugi Kyoto Ware Sake Cup | Seigaiha Motif

Ref. UN0034

CHF 534.00

One of a Kind

Food Safe

Certified Authentic

Restored by Keiko Hata

Hand-restored in Japan with traditional kintsugi techniques using natural urushi lacquer.

See more works by Keiko Hata →

Seigaiha Waves in Kyoto Clay

The Seigaiha motif—layered ocean waves symbolizing calm seas and enduring fortune—covers this sake cup not through painting but through Kawarinuri, a lacquer layering technique that builds depth you can feel under your fingertips. The cup itself is Kyoto ware, shaped in a ceramic tradition spanning a thousand years.

Born of Kyoto's Heritage: This piece too is authentic Kyo-yaki pottery, handcrafted using time-honored techniques and refined by centuries of Japanese artistry.
Learn more → The Art and Technique of Kyoto Ware

A Single Gold Line

The restoration is the work of Keiko Hata, who studied urushi through graduate research at Kyoto City University of Arts (est. 1880), completing the full lacquer discipline from woodworking to gold application. Her background in Buddhist statue conservation shapes her approach: precise, unhurried, and governed by the material. Over four months, she refined a single fracture with natural urushi lacquer and 24K gold — one restrained line crossing the wave pattern, drawing on a discipline passed down through generations of Japanese lacquer artists.

Beyond the Gold Line

Most kintsugi concludes with gold along the fracture, yet Japan's lacquer heritage has always held room for the artist to continue creating beyond the seam. The Seigaiha waves layered across this cup are an ancient symbol of calm seas and enduring fortune — a wish carried forward from artist to owner. Kintsugi and kawarinuri decoration rarely converge on a single vessel; the combination demands training across the full range of urushi disciplines. Here, a gold line crosses the waves as though charting a course toward the collector who will hold it next.

About vessel:

  • Type: Porcelain
  • Origin: Kyoto ware

Materials used:

  • Natural urushi lacquer
  • 24K gold powder

Production time (in months): 4

Care & Food Safety

    • After use, wash the pieces using a soft sponge and foodsafe detergent.
    • Rinse them in lukewarm or cool water and completely dry them using a soft dish cloth.
    • Do not soak them in hot or cold water for long periods of time. This may cause the urushi or maki-e lacquer to peel or fracture.
    • The urushi (Japanese lacquer) may break or the maki-e lacquer decoration may peel off if the piece is dropped or if it collides with other hard objects. Please handle these pieces carefully.
    • Do not place these pieces in the microwave or dishwasher.

Safe for Everyday Use:
Restored with natural, non-toxic materials, our Kintsugi piece is safe for everyday use - no worries about leaks or harmful chemicals.

📦 Inside the Box

A traditional paulownia wood box (except for some flatware), with a Store Card, Care Instructions, and Certificate of Authenticity & Quality.

📱 See our packing on Instagram — @kintsugilabo

🚚 Worldwide Delivery
  • Ships in 2–3 business days via DHL Express (international, tracked) or Japan Post (domestic). Estimated transit to USA, UK, Canada, and Australia: 1–2 weeks, subject to local customs.
  • We ship to USA, UK, Canada, Australia, France, Italy, Switzerland, Belgium, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, Malaysia, Ireland, Brazil, Spain, and Japan. Contact us for other destinations.
  • DHL does not deliver to PO Boxes.
  • View 2026 Japan Shipping Holidays →

🛃 Duties & Taxes (DAP)

Our prices do not include import duties or taxes — these are set by your country's customs and are the buyer's responsibility. DHL will email you a secure payment link before delivery; once paid, your order is cleared and delivered.

  • 🇺🇸 U.S. customers: a 10% import duty applies (effective February 24, 2026, subject to U.S. policy).
  • 🎁 Gift orders: Duty notifications go to you (the buyer), not the recipient. If unpaid by the deadline, DHL may contact the recipient directly.
  • ⚠️ Unpaid duties may delay delivery or return the package; return shipping may be deducted from refunds.

Full Shipping & Customs Policy→

Gift-Ready Presentation
Paulownia Wood Box
Traditional paulownia wood gift box hand-stamped with The Kintsugi Labo JAPAN seal, made in Japan
Hand-stamped paulownia wood box, crafted in Japan — gift-ready.
Gift Message Card
Complimentary luxury gift message card enclosed with each kintsugi piece, front and reverse design
Add a personal note at checkout — enclosed inside the gift box.
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✈︎ Complimentary Worldwide Shipping
  • Shipped worldwide from Japan via DHL Express.
  • All prices are before duties and taxes.
  • U.S. Orders — Approximately 10% duty (subject to U.S. policy), billed by DHL before delivery.
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CHF 534.00

Beyond Kintsugi Restoration

Where Kintsugi Becomes Urushi Art

Kintsugi is not defined by gold alone. While most pieces are finished with gold, silver, or colored urushi lacquer,
this piece takes it a step further by combining kintsugi with a traditional urushi decorative technique, resulting in a one-of-a-kind work of art.

The Urushi Decoration Technique Applied:

Kawari-nuri (変塗) — Creative Lacquering

This is a family of creative lacquering techniques in which colored urushi is layered, dabbed, or pressed with a cloth to create textured patterns. Through repeated cycles of layering and polishing, hidden colors or pastterns emerge, creating unique surfaces.

The Craft Behind the Beauty

Understanding the Art of Kintsugi

Urushi artist applying 24K gold powder by hand to the kintsugi seam of a sometsuke (blue-and-white) porcelain piece — The Kintsugi Labo JAPAN

Kintsugi (金継ぎ) — from kin (gold) and tsugi (to mend) — is the Japanese art of restoring broken pottery with natural urushi lacquer, adorned with powdered gold, silver, or colored urushi.

Though it's often called "golden joinery" in the West, the visible gold is only the finish — every kintsugi restoration is, fundamentally, an urushi lacquer technique. In Japan, kintsugi is understood as one expression within a broader tradition of urushi arts spanning thousands of years.

Rooted in wabi-sabi, it embraces imperfection and renewal — honoring a vessel's history rather than concealing it.

Read the full story on our Essence page

Urushi (漆) is natural sap harvested from the lacquer tree, used in Japanese craft for over 5,500 years. In kintsugi, urushi is the actual material that mends, fills, and seals every fracture — the gold or silver powder is decoration applied over it.

As urushi cures, it forms a remarkably strong film with properties no synthetic adhesive can replicate:

  • Strong adhesion — ensures durable restoration
  • Water resistance — protects against leaks
  • Chemical resistance — withstands acids, alkalis, salts, and alcohols
  • Thermal insulation — shields against heat
  • Natural antiseptic — resists bacteria and fungi

These qualities make every urushi-restored piece food-safe, leak-proof, and suited for daily use — not only display. As a renewable, biodegradable material, urushi also reflects the sustainable spirit of traditional Japanese craft.

Authentic kintsugi takes 4–5 months per piece, never shortened by synthetic substitutes. The process unfolds in three stages:

  1. Mending — Cracks, chips, or fractures are filled with urushi lacquer, blended with other natural materials when extra strength is needed.
  2. Layering — Restored areas are coated, dried, and polished across multiple cycles to build a smooth, durable base.
  3. Finishing — Metal powder is applied: pure gold most often, sometimes silver (gintsugi) or colored urushi (iro-urushitsugi), chosen to honor the original vessel.

Learn more about the kintsugi techniques

Kintsugi Is More Than Gold

Kintsugi is not defined by gold alone. The essence of the craft lies in the restoration process using natural urushi lacquer. Gold, silver, and colored urushi lacquers are simply different traditional finishes, each chosen to complement the vessel's character. All are authentic expressions of kintsugi.

Finish on This Piece: Kintsugi

Three kintsugi finishes — gold (kintsugi), silver (gintsugi), and colored urushi (iro-urushitsugi)
Style Finishing Material Aesthetic & Philosophy
Kintsugi
金継ぎ
Pure 24K gold powder The classic finish — warm, luxurious, and rooted in history.
Gintsugi
銀継ぎ
Fine silver powder A cooler, contemporary register — serene and modern in feel.
Iro-Urushitsugi
色漆継ぎ
Colored urushi An expressive choice — vivid pigment harmonizing with the vessel's character.
Certificate of Authenticity for an authentic Kintsugi artwork, printed on traditional Japanese washi paper with our original artisan seal, certifying handcrafted urushi lacquer restoration made in Japan.

Verified Authentic

A Certificate of Authenticity with Every Piece

Every kintsugi piece comes with a Certificate of Authenticity & Quality — verifying its Japanese origin, natural urushi materials, and traditional craftsmanship.

Printed on Japanese washi paper (a craft refined over 1,300 years) and stamped with our original brand seal, the certificate is itself a small work of Japanese art.

Cherish it alongside your one-of-a-kind piece.

What Our Collectors Say

Verified Kintsugi Reviews from Around the World

Thoughtfully Crafted with Sustainability in Every step

The Philosophy Behind Our Kintsugi

Traditional Craftsmanship

Restored with authentic urushi methods and natural materials, completely free from synthetic additives.

Thoughtful Sourcing

Each piece begins as a genuinely broken Japanese ceramic sourced from our trusted partners.

Premium Packaging

Elegantly protected in a sustainable paulownia box and delivered with carbon-neutral transit.