Echizen Pottery Village — Ancient Kiln Town
Echizen-yaki (越前焼) is one of Japan's Six Ancient Kilns (Rokkoyō), with pottery production dating to the Heian period (794–1185). Echizen ceramics are characterized by natural ash glazing — wood-fired kilns deposit ash on the pottery during firing, creating irregular green-brown glazes unique to each piece. The village of Miyazaki in Echizen City remains the production center, with 60+ active kilns and workshops clustered in forested hills.
The Fukui Prefectural Echizen Ceramics Museum displays 1,000+ years of Echizen pottery, from utilitarian medieval storage jars to contemporary artist works. The museum's outdoor noborigama (climbing kiln) operates during annual firing festivals, allowing visitors to witness the week-long wood-firing process. The adjacent Pottery Village offers 15+ studios selling handmade teacups, vases, and tableware (¥2,000–50,000). Many studios offer wheel-throwing workshops (¥2,500, 90 minutes) — participants create bowls or cups that are fired and shipped 6–8 weeks later.
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