Introduction: The Paper That Outlasted Every Alternative

Echizen washi (越前和紙) — traditional Japanese paper produced in the Imadate area (今立地区) of Echizen City, Fukui Prefecture — is the most historically significant and arguably the finest washi tradition in Japan. The area has produced paper continuously for approximately 1,500 years, and Echizen washi has been the preferred paper for Japan's most demanding applications throughout that span: imperial documents, currency printing (the Bank of Japan still uses Echizen paper for specific securities), Buddhist sutras, and the finest woodblock print production.

The Washi Production Process

Traditional Echizen washi production follows a process whose fundamental steps have been maintained across 1,500 years of continuous refinement:

The Raw Material: Kozo, Mitsumata, Gampi

Japanese washi is made from the bast fibers of specific plants — the inner bark layer whose long, flexible fibers produce paper of exceptional strength, translucency, and longevity:

Kozo (楮 / paper mulberry): The most widely used washi fiber — produces strong, slightly textured paper. The majority of functional washi (including the washi used in shoji screens and lanterns) uses kozo.

Mitsumata (三椏): A softer, finer fiber producing paper of greater delicacy — used for the highest-quality printing paper and currency.

Gampi (雁皮): The rarest and most difficult to cultivate fiber — produces the most refined, most translucent, and most durable washi, with a specific sheen. Echizen gampi paper was the historical paper of choice for the imperial court.

The Process Steps

Harvesting and cooking: The bark is harvested in winter (when fiber quality is highest), the outer bark removed, and the inner bast fiber cooked in an alkaline solution (traditionally wood ash lye) to separate and soften the fibers.

Beating (叩解 / kokkai): The cooked fiber is beaten by hand (traditionally with wooden mallets on stone) or by mechanical beater — this step is critical for paper quality, as the degree of fiber separation determines the paper's texture and strength.

The neri (ねり): A viscous liquid extracted from the tororo-aoi (トロロアオイ) plant root is added to the fiber-and-water suspension — the neri's viscosity controls how the fibers distribute on the forming screen and determines the paper's ultimate evenness.

Sheet forming (漉き / suki): The paper maker dips a su (簀) — a flexible bamboo screen in a wooden frame — into the fiber suspension and draws it forward and back, building up layers of fiber on the screen surface. The movement controls the paper's thickness and fiber distribution. This step is the most skilled and the most specific to the individual paper maker's technique.

Pressing and drying: Formed sheets are stacked, pressed to remove excess water, then separated and dried on wooden boards or heated drying surfaces.

What Makes Echizen Different

Echizen's specific water (from the Kamikawa River system, flowing from the mountains through paper-making communities) has long been identified as a contributing factor to the paper's quality — the water chemistry affects how fibers distribute and bond during forming. The accumulated generations of technique refinement in a concentrated geographic area, combined with the continuing use of traditional materials and methods, produces paper whose performance (longevity, printability, specific translucency) is measurably superior to mechanically produced alternatives for demanding applications.

The Visitor Experience

Udatsu no Machi (卯立の工芸館): The Working Paper Village

The Udatsu district of Imadate preserves a traditional paper-making townscape — merchant houses with the distinctive udatsu (卯立) firewall extensions (raised side walls between buildings that served as fire protection) that are characteristic of successful Echizen merchants. Several of the surviving buildings are paper-making workshops that accept visitors.

The Echizen Washi no Sato Museum (越前和紙の里): The primary museum facility — displays on washi history and technique, a hands-on paper-making workshop available to all visitors, and a shop selling Echizen washi products.

The Workshop Experience: For ¥1,000–¥2,000, visitors participate in the sheet-forming process under artisan guidance — dipping the screen, moving it in the characteristic forward-back motion, watching the fibers distribute. The resulting sheet, dried and taken home, provides a physical souvenir of direct participation in the process.

The Contemporary Washi Industry

Echizen washi faces the same existential challenge as every traditional craft: the domestic market has contracted as Western paper replaced washi for most everyday applications, and the artisan succession problem (young people choosing other careers) limits production capacity.

The contemporary responses have included:

Collaboration with contemporary artists and designers (washi as high-end design material)

International sales (Japanese washi's UNESCO recognition has increased international interest)

Tourism-based income supplementation (visitor fees and workshop revenue)

Technical application development (washi for specific conservation and archival applications where paper longevity is critical)