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Size 9 Earthenware Pot Sometsuke Style Camellia
Kutaniyaki hand-made, hand-painted Sometsuke style size 9 earthenware pot (for use over open flame). A "simple is modern" design featuring a Sometsuke pattern using a single indigo color.
[Sometsuke Style] Known also in China as "blue flower", cobalt-based paint called "gosu" is is applied mixed with water and applied to a porcelain base to sketch out the item's pattern. It is then coated with glass glaze and fired. As the Sometsuke method involves painting directly on to the bare porcelain, it is no exaggeration to say that the quality good or bad is a direct expression of the painter's brushstrokes and passion. Featuring a camellia pattern that blossoms from winter through spring, this hand-made earthenware item has the characteristic thick-walled construction that unlike porcelain the water-absorbent properties of the material allow. Made with 50% petalite, it has greater heat resistance and lighter weight than usual. The hand-painted picture of pretty camellia has been applied with a gentle touch to light up this piece. Suitable both for everyday use when relaxing with friends and family, and for impressing visiting guests.
[Kutaniyaki]
Kutaniyaki has been designated by the Minister of Economy, Trade, and Industry as a traditional Japanese craft.
JAPAN KUTANI is an art that represents Japan! This work of art boasts five colors that show the history and tradition of the Kaga Hyakuman-koku, a fief known for producing a million "koku" (about five million bushels) of rice.
Featuring a bold, original composition and rich, beautiful use of colors, this glazed pottery has breathtaking expressive qualities that represent the best of Japanese crafts.
This style of pottery was created approximately 360 years ago (around 1655, in the early Edo period) in the village of Kutani, located in the Daishoji domain (part of the Kaga clan) to symbolize the glory of Kaga Hyakuman-koku. This pottery boasts a focus on dazzling, luxurious decorative glazing and a unique style that colorfully illustrates the atmosphere of daily life.
The appeal of Kutaniyaki can be found in its coloring, the Kutani Five Colors - red, blue (green), yellow, purple, and navy - that form its base while the shimmering, transparent appearance of the glaze brings out its depictive qualities. The combination of the strong sturdy porcelain material and the graceful, elegant use of the five colors has established a style of innovative, artistic pottery.
Under the name JAPAN KUTANI, this pottery has been known as an export since the Meiji period that has grown to have wide name recognition and popularity in the West. One man in particular, named Shoza Kutani, established a line of "colored brocade" vases and other works that planted the seeds of worldwide popularity thanks to his exhibition at a World Expo.
This history, tradition, and thought continues to this day in the vibrant appearance of Kutaniyaki, which is created with the feelings of craftsmen who wish to add vibrancy and warmth to the long winters of the Hokuriku region. The beauty of the glass glaze and its smooth, transparent appearance attracts pottery enthusiasts from all corners of the world.
Size 10 Healthy Steamer Pot Heavenly Bamboo & Pheasant's Eye
This product represents a collaboration between the Kutani Wagama style, in the form of a hand-made lid, and the traditional Bankoyaki style, supplying an earthenware pot. Hand-made, hand-color-painted size 10 earthenware pot (for use over open flame). Featuring a ceramic steaming bowl, you can use this pot for steaming with water, or remove the bowl to use as a regular hot-pot.
Made by traditional potter craftsman Yoshinori Fukuda, a member of the Sozobijutsukai. Heavenly bamboo flowers from the beginning of summer, and bears small round red fruit from the end of winter through early winter. Pheasant's eye is distinctive for its flowers which blossom in the spring.
With a picture pattern that is perfectly in harmony with the hot-pot season from later autumn through to early spring, this hand-made earthenware item has the characteristic thick-walled construction that unlike porcelain the water-absorbent properties of the material allow. Made with 50% petalite, it has greater heat resistance and lighter weight than usual. The hand-painted picture of pretty flowers has been applied with a gentle touch to light up this piece.
Suitable both for everyday use when relaxing with friends and family, and for impressing visiting guests.
[Kutaniyaki]
Kutaniyaki has been designated by the Minister of Economy, Trade, and Industry as a traditional Japanese craft.
JAPAN KUTANI is an art that represents Japan! This work of art boasts five colors that show the history and tradition of the Kaga Hyakuman-koku, a fief known for producing a million "koku" (about five million bushels) of rice.
Featuring a bold, original composition and rich, beautiful use of colors, this glazed pottery has breathtaking expressive qualities that represent the best of Japanese crafts.
This style of pottery was created approximately 360 years ago (around 1655, in the early Edo period) in the village of Kutani, located in the Daishoji domain (part of the Kaga clan) to symbolize the glory of Kaga Hyakuman-koku. This pottery boasts a focus on dazzling, luxurious decorative glazing and a unique style that colorfully illustrates the atmosphere of daily life.
The appeal of Kutaniyaki can be found in its coloring, the Kutani Five Colors - red, blue (green), yellow, purple, and navy - that form its base while the shimmering, transparent appearance of the glaze brings out its depictive qualities. The combination of the strong sturdy porcelain material and the graceful, elegant use of the five colors has established a style of innovative, artistic pottery.
Under the name JAPAN KUTANI, this pottery has been known as an export since the Meiji period that has grown to have wide name recognition and popularity in the West. One man in particular, named Shoza Kutani, established a line of "colored brocade" vases and other works that planted the seeds of worldwide popularity thanks to his exhibition at a World Expo.
This history, tradition, and thought continues to this day in the vibrant appearance of Kutaniyaki, which is created with the feelings of craftsmen who wish to add vibrancy and warmth to the long winters of the Hokuriku region. The beauty of the glass glaze and its smooth, transparent appearance attracts pottery enthusiasts from all corners of the world.
Size 10 Healthy Steamer Pot Colored Camellia
This product represents a collaboration between the Kutani Wagama style, in the form of a hand-made lid, and the traditional Bankoyaki style, supplying an earthenware pot. Hand-made, hand-color-painted size 10 earthenware pot (for use over open flame). Featuring a ceramic steaming bowl, you can use this pot for steaming with water, or remove the bowl to use as a regular hot-pot.
Made by traditional potter craftsman Yoshinori Fukuda, a member of the Sozobijutsukai. The design features camellia, a flower that is a staple representative of the winter season.
With a picture pattern that is perfectly in harmony with the hot-pot season from early winter through to the beginnings of spring, this hand-made earthenware item has the characteristic thick-walled construction that unlike porcelain the water-absorbent properties of the material allow. Made with 50% petalite, it has greater heat resistance and lighter weight than usual. The hand-painted picture of pretty flowers has been applied with a gentle touch to light up this piece.
Suitable both for everyday use when relaxing with friends and family, and for impressing visiting guests.
[Kutaniyaki]
Kutaniyaki has been designated by the Minister of Economy, Trade, and Industry as a traditional Japanese craft.
JAPAN KUTANI is an art that represents Japan! This work of art boasts five colors that show the history and tradition of the Kaga Hyakuman-koku, a fief known for producing a million "koku" (about five million bushels) of rice.
Featuring a bold, original composition and rich, beautiful use of colors, this glazed pottery has breathtaking expressive qualities that represent the best of Japanese crafts.
This style of pottery was created approximately 360 years ago (around 1655, in the early Edo period) in the village of Kutani, located in the Daishoji domain (part of the Kaga clan) to symbolize the glory of Kaga Hyakuman-koku. This pottery boasts a focus on dazzling, luxurious decorative glazing and a unique style that colorfully illustrates the atmosphere of daily life.
The appeal of Kutaniyaki can be found in its coloring, the Kutani Five Colors - red, blue (green), yellow, purple, and navy - that form its base while the shimmering, transparent appearance of the glaze brings out its depictive qualities. The combination of the strong sturdy porcelain material and the graceful, elegant use of the five colors has established a style of innovative, artistic pottery.
Under the name JAPAN KUTANI, this pottery has been known as an export since the Meiji period that has grown to have wide name recognition and popularity in the West. One man in particular, named Shoza Kutani, established a line of "colored brocade" vases and other works that planted the seeds of worldwide popularity thanks to his exhibition at a World Expo.
This history, tradition, and thought continues to this day in the vibrant appearance of Kutaniyaki, which is created with the feelings of craftsmen who wish to add vibrancy and warmth to the long winters of the Hokuriku region. The beauty of the glass glaze and its smooth, transparent appearance attracts pottery enthusiasts from all corners of the world.
Kohiki Heat Resistant Sukiyaki Pot
Versatile porcelain ware that can be used in the microwave or oven. It can also withstand low heat slow cooking as well! From the kitchen to the table!
A sukiyaki pot from the Kohiki heat resistant series. Features a simple design that can be handled easily.
Bankoyaki ware made using traditional techniques.
Bankoyaki porcelain is one of many traditional crafts that has superior heat resistance. It is classified as semi-porcelain which possesses features of both ceramic and porcelain.
Bankoyaki is one of the local industries representing the Yokkaichi city in Mie Prefecture. In 1979 Jan. 12th, it was designated as one of the traditional crafts of Japan. The ware boasts high heat resistance, for which Bankoyaki purple-clay tea pots and earthen pots are famous.
Mie Prefecture Kamado 5-Cup Rice Pot
No matter what the state of your fire, this kamado will cook your rice right! Coated with a special glaze that utilizes far-infrared radiation to transmit heat all the way to the core of rice, allowing it to cook up nice and fluffy no matter what the flame. Nice and thick, storing heat and maintaining a boil even when removed from fire to steam via residual heat. Also keeps rice hot. Lid constructed with the same 2-ply design as a pressure cooker to prevent boiling over. Made of spongy coarse clay to have the same absorptive qualities wooden rice containers, to prevent rice from becoming sticky, making it delicious to eat even when cold.
1-16, Minamikyuhojimachi 2 chome, Chuo-ku, Osaka 541-0058, JAPAN