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Shigaraki Pottery Village
HistoryActivity
Shiga, Kansai

Shigaraki Pottery Village

One of Japan's Six Ancient Kilns — Shigaraki pottery has been produced for 1,200 years and is famous for its natural ash glaze and warm clay body. The village is lined with kiln workshops and galleries, and tanuki (raccoon dog) figurines from Shigaraki are the iconic lucky charms displayed outside almost every Japanese shop.

Duration

Half day

Admission

Free (workshops ¥2,000)

Hours

Village accessible year-round; workshops: typically 9:00–17:00; tanuki (raccoon dog) statues visible everywhere

Best Season

Year-round

Access

Shigaraki Station on Shigaraki Kohgen Railway (50 min from Kibukawa)

Location

Why Visit

  • 1

    One of Japan's Six Ancient Kilns — continuous pottery tradition for 1,200 years

  • 2

    The tanuki (raccoon dog) figurines displayed at shop entrances across Japan originated here

  • 3

    Pottery workshops let you throw clay on a wheel and glaze your own Shigaraki-ware piece

Local Tips

Shigaraki is one of Japan's six ancient kiln sites — the chunky, flame-marked Shigaraki ware is immediately recognizable. The distinctive ceramic tanuki (raccoon dog) statues outside shops are a Shigaraki signature. Several large kilns (including the Shigaraki Ceramic Cultural Park) offer excellent throwing workshops for 2–3 hours. Combine with the Miho Museum (25 min by car).

ceramicsancient kilntanukipottery walk

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