There’s a quiet kind of generosity in how things are made. Not just in the object itself, but in its use—in how it’s wrapped, carried, offered, received. In rural Japan, farmers once carried eggs in straw-woven packages so considered they bordered on poetic. These were not formal designs. They were solutions. But over time, repetition gave them shape, and shape gave them meaning.
This volume turns to How to Wrap Five Eggs—Hideyuki Oka’s photographic and philosophical study of traditional Japanese packaging. Beauty, in these pages, is not an adornment but a consequence of deep attention. The materials are modest: bamboo bark, paper, rice straw. The forms are practical. And yet, what emerges is a kind of artistry. Attention becomes beauty. Utility becomes ritual.
Craft, here, is a language. Not one of spectacle, but of care—passed down, practiced daily, and refined through time. These wrappings aren’t about decoration. They reflect a belief: that even the simplest object deserves intention. That the smallest gesture can carry feeling. And that usefulness and beauty are never at odds.
“Such packages were not products of contemplation, nor yet of theory. They assumed their shapes over years and years of unself-conscious use and experimentation, which is to say that this packaging is one form of Japan's cultural heritage. It was not perfected overnight: behind each of these humble packages lie generations of art and craft.”
“These wrappings have an artless and obedient air that greatly moves the modern viewer. They are whispered evidence of the Japanese ability to create beauty from the simplest products of nature.”
“They were driven by two considerations: an aesthetic philosophy that said everything could and should be made beautiful and a value system in which all objects, large or small, expensive or cheap, were of real value. Today our sense of values is quite different, and we often wonder why those long-ago artisans took so much trouble, spending so much time and energy in wrapping unimportant, humble objects.”
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Every Kalon collection has sprung from our own lives — they are the pieces we need, desire, and love. Elevated nursery designs that refuse to compromise, spacious dining tables that extend to seat those we love, living room staples that invite conversation: Our collections reflect the ways we live... and hope to live.
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