Souvenir Guide · Kitchenware & Ceramics
Buying a Japanese Kitchen Knife —
Kappabashi vs Sakai vs Seki, and How Not to Regret It
Santoku or Gyuto · Carbon or Stainless · Engraving · Flying It Home
The One Souvenir That Outlives the Trip
A hand-finished Japanese knife is the rare souvenir that improves daily life for decades — and the buying experience (testing edges, getting your name engraved in kanji) is a travel memory in itself. Prices at source run half of Western retail. You need three decisions and one packing rule.
Decision 1: The Shape
Santoku (“three virtues”) — the do-everything home blade; buy this if unsure. Gyuto — the Japanese chef’s knife, longer, for confident cooks. Nakiri — vegetable rectangle, the vegetarian’s joy. Petty — the small second knife everyone ends up loving most. Sushi-knife romantics: a single-bevel yanagiba is beautiful and unforgiving — know what you’re signing up for.
Decision 2: The Steel
Stainless (VG-10, Ginsan) — low-maintenance, holds a fine edge; right answer for most homes. Carbon (Shirogami/Aogami) — sharper, sharpens easier, and rusts if neglected; for people who enjoy caring for tools. Damascus patterns are cosmetic — pretty, not better.
Decision 3: The Town
Kappabashi (Tokyo) — maximum choice and English support: Kamata for guided buying, Tsubaya for depth — covered in our Kappabashi guide. Sakai (Osaka) — 600 years of forge-town lineage, where most of Japan’s professional blades originate; see our Sakai day-trip guide. Seki (Gifu) — the samurai-sword city turned modern blade capital, with a good museum and factory outlets. Kyoto’s Aritsugu (Nishiki Market, since 1560) deserves its legend — and its queue.
The Rituals Worth Doing
Ask for name engraving (many shops do it free in minutes — your name in katakana, hammer-tapped into the blade). Buy the matching whetstone (#1000/#6000 combo) and ask for a 90-second sharpening lesson; shops love teaching.
Flying It Home
Checked luggage only — no exceptions, and that includes the connecting domestic flight. Shops box blades securely for transit; keep the receipt with your tax-free paperwork. Most countries admit kitchen knives without fuss; just don’t leave it in a carry-on and donate it to airport security.
