Echizen Washi Paper — UNESCO Intangible Heritage Craft
Echizen washi (越前和紙) is handmade paper produced using techniques unchanged for 1,500 years, recognized by UNESCO as Intangible Cultural Heritage in 2014. The paper is made from kozo (mulberry bark), mitsumata (oriental paperbush), or gampi fibers soaked, beaten, and suspended in water, then hand-screened onto bamboo frames one sheet at a time. The resulting paper is extraordinarily strong, flexible, and translucent — used for traditional applications from shoji screens to calligraphy scrolls to modern art prints.
The Echizen Washi Village in Otaki district preserves the craft through working paper mills, a museum, and workshops. The Udatsu Paper & Culture Museum displays antique papermaking tools and hosts live demonstrations daily (11:00 and 14:00) where visitors watch artisans create washi using traditional techniques. The adjacent workshops offer hands-on papermaking (¥800, 30 minutes) — participants dip bamboo screens into fiber slurry, shake to distribute fibers evenly, and press the sheet. The finished paper (decorated with flower petals or colored fibers) is dried and provided as a souvenir.
Getting There
Access Information
Insider Guide
Unlock Insider Tips
Booking secrets, hidden viewpoints, and local contacts — exclusively for Premium members.
Get Premium · from $5/monthBook Your Stay Nearby
Find accommodation close to Echizen Washi Paper — UNESCO Intangible Heritage Craft on these trusted booking platforms:
More in Fukui
Fukui Prefectural Dinosaur Museum — World-Class Fossil Collection
The Fukui Prefectural Dinosaur Museum ranks among the world's three premier dinosaur museums (alongside Beijing and Drum…
Tojinbo Cliffs — Hexagonal Basalt Columns Over the Sea
Tojinbo is a 1-kilometer stretch of vertical basalt columnar jointing cliffs rising 20–30 meters above the Sea of Japan…
Eiheiji Temple — 700-Year-Old Zen Training Monastery
Eiheiji (永平寺, 'Temple of Eternal Peace') is one of Japan's two head temples of Soto Zen Buddhism, founded in 1244 by Zen…