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Japanese Washi Paper Crafting Kit

Sale price$99.00

Awagami Factory invites you into the poetic world of traditional papermaking with this complete washi crafting kit. Rooted in Tokushima’s centuries-old legacy, the set includes all the essentials—delicate pre-formed pulp sheets, a postcard-sized su (papermaking frame), and binding agent—elegantly packaged and ready for your first sheet.

From the texture of each fiber to the subtle variations shaped by your own hands, this quiet craft offers more than just paper—it offers a moment of stillness and reflection. Whether you create for art, correspondence, or memory, this kit bridges timeless Japanese technique with your personal imprint.

A meaningful introduction to washi for both the curious beginner and the seasoned hand.

Japanese Washi Paper Crafting Kit
Japanese Washi Paper Crafting Kit Sale price$99.00

Meet the Artisan

Awagami Factory

Awagami Factory is a family-run papermaking atelier in Tokushima, rooted in over 300 years of washi tradition. Operated by the Fujimori family, the workshop traces its origins to the Edo period, when ancestors began crafting Awa Washi using the region’s abundant clean water and local plant fibers. Officially established in its current form in 1945, Awagami Factory has since become one of the few remaining makers dedicated to preserving the depth and discipline of hand-papermaking in Japan.

What sets Awagami apart is its rare duality: it honors centuries-old techniques while actively pushing the boundaries of what handmade paper can be. Under the guidance of successive generations—including Minoru Fujimori, a designated Master Craftsman—the factory has cultivated a wide range of papers for contemporary use, from printmaking and fine art to interior design and everyday creative expression.

Each sheet is made with a devotion to integrity—no shortcuts, no synthetic pulp. Whether created from kozo, mitsumata, or gampi, every fiber is selected, processed, and lifted into form with care that borders on reverence. Their ethos is not mass production, but cultural stewardship: to keep Awa Washi alive not in a museum, but in the hands of those who will write, fold, dye, or create with it.