This is a store where you can make colorful washi paper wearing samue, a traditonal Japanese work clothes!
Ryogoku Kokugikan or the Ryogoku Sumo Arena offers three grand sumo wrestling tournaments every year. This arena draws your attention with its traditional-style seats and atmosphere while you are enjoying games of the national sport of Japan (sumo).
One of Japan's Three Big Festivals
Watch Tokyo’s Downtown Area Lit Up by Fireworks at Night
One of the three major Edo festivals. Also known as the ”water throwing festival” for as its name suggests spectators throw water on Omikoshi (portable shrine) bearers; it is a festival held annually at Tomioka Hachimangu Shrine.
The Kabuki-za theater is a large-scale theater where kabuki, a traditional Japanese play, is performed.
Watch 100 Portable Shrines Being Carried Around Asakusa
A Brilliant Firework Festival with an Ever-changing Theme
Specializing in Nogaku (Noh and Kyogen), a traditional Japanese performing art.
Watch Performers Dancing to the Beat of Drums and Shamisens in Koenji’s Streets
A Must-See Performance with Colorful Costumes and Spectacular Dancing
The Festival Connected with the Tokugawa Shogun Visits to the Kanda Shrine
Enjoy Fireworks from the Banks of the Arakawa River
Rakugo is a type of humorous storytelling which depicts the daily lives of townspeople, fairy tales, and more. This is an old tradition which has been loved in Japan since the Edo period. Ikebukuro Engei-jo is a place in Ikebukuro where you can enjoy rakugo. There are chair seats available, so you can sit for a long time without trouble. Let yourself get sucked into the world created by the rakugo storyteller.