Hanko Land Tokyo is a name stamp specialty store established in 1921 with the motto “the fastest hanko production store in Japan.”
Kikusuido is a long-established Japanese sweets shop in Asakusa. Enjoy Asakusa's specialty deep-fried manju, sweets skewers, daifuku, and other excellent Japanese sweets!
X Akihabara Station store mainly sells figures and robot figures.
Japan's highest level kitchen knife manufacturer. “Show”, which are the kitchen knives for home use and made with professional technology, are now sold only in Japan.
A store specializing in Buddhist altar equipment in Kyoto's Kawaramachi district. We sell all sorts of equipment, including Buddhist altars, Buddhist statues, rosary, incense sticks and candles.
Barrier-free rest area for visitors to the Imperial Palace and park users. The facility has a restaurant and store.
A chopsticks speciality store, with traditional crafts collected from all over Japan. Directly connected to the popular tourist attraction of Tokyo Skytree. Easily accessible.
We sell Japanese character goods and souvenirs inspired by Japanese culture at Osaka's Nippombashi.
Hanko Shop 21 specializes in traditional hanko, which is also popular as a travel souvenir.
A specialist shop selling ukiyo-e style Japanese woodblock prints. Ukiyo-e beginners are welcome!
The only antenna store of ARTNWORDZ in Asia, a pop art company for original art and a comprehensive brand of products born in the United States.
A wide variety of light, crispy, and ice-cold monaka (bean-jam wafer)
High-quality Japanese miscellaneous goods selected by a long-established shop in Ginza.
Appreciate the palm-sized artworks
An exhibition and shop of items unique to Nara
Puffy yet crispy. A popular store for Agemanju (deep-fried manju, or bun stuffed with azuki bean paste), which is an Asakusa specialty, always with a line of people.
From reasonably priced souvenirs to a precious one-of-a-kind antique, you can get almost anything at the Oriental Bazaar.
More than a thousand picture postcards adorn this store's walls, including valuable ones from Kyoto's art galleries and museums as well as other regions of Japan. In fact, searching for your favorite postcard here feels like viewing artworks in an actual museum. Items popular among non-Japanese people, such as folding screens and folding fans, are available too.