Tea caddy, urushi lacquered matcha natsume, red lacquer decorated with woven wood, XX Century. The smooth, glossy red lacquer contrasts with the natural, textured wood, which is intricately woven into the design. The woven wood is subtly highlighted with lacquer, creating a blend of organic and refined materials. The caddy’s form is rounded, with a snug-fitting lid.
Japanese Urushi Lacquerware
Real Japanese lacquerware uses sap from the urushi tree. It’s not varnish, not shellac, not resin. Urushi hardens by humidity, not air, and once cured it’s tough, chemical-resistant, and slightly elastic.
Surface refinement and finish
Whether glossy (roiro), matte, or textured, the surface is deliberate and controlled. Even simple black lacquer is about precision, not decoration. Sloppy edges, pooling, or uneven thickness are dead giveaways of cheap work.
Lacquerware decoration
Techniques such as maki-e, gold leaf or nashiji are not just applied on top of the urushi, they’re embedded into the lacquer layers. With urushi lacquerware decoration is structural and represents centuries of tradition through technique.





