Two wooden boxes, one with a clear top and one with a wooden top.
Boxes by Masuda Kiribako. Courtesy Masuda Kiribako

These Wood Boxes Hold Centuries of Japanese Culture and Craftsmanship

Masuda Kiribako has been producing traditional receptacles out of paulownia wood since 1929.
By Kathryn O’Shea-Evans
December 19, 2020
2 minute read

Wood boxes are something of a national treasure in Japan, where Buddhist monks began tucking stoles, prayer beads, and other ritual implements into them more than 1,300 years ago. With the rise of teahouses a few centuries later, vessels specifically created for tea and tea-making tools appeared, symbolizing and safeguarding their contents, and bringing the tradition of kiribako—boxes handcrafted from paulownia, a native tree with lightweight, durable, water-resistant timber—into the mainstream. Today, Japanese manufacturers produce wood boxes for a wide variety of objects, including food, furniture, flowers, clothing, and even trash. Among the country’s most lauded container companies: Masuda Kiribako, which has been skillfully producing traditional receptacles since 1929.

Currently run by 33-year-old third-generation craftsman Hirofumi Fujii (the great-grandson of Masuda Kiribako’s founder, Matsuyoshi Masuda), the outfit makes its boxes with the help of some 50 staffers in Fukuoka prefecture, on Japan’s southwestern island of Kyūshū. It’s a lengthy, front-loaded process: The lumber is prepared for construction using an ancient blanching method called akunuki, which involves exposing the material to the elements for five years, followed by several years of kigoroshi, a process of flattening the wood using a hammer or clamps. The result of all this care? Smooth, uniform planks of paulownia, ready to be transformed into heirloom-worthy catchalls. As the holidays roll around, we suggest using one to achieve next-level gifting. Wrapping paper and a cardboard coffer simply doesn’t compare.