Muni Tailored Japan

Muni Tailored Japan Beyond Travel, Beyond Compare. muni|TAILORED JAPAN delivers bespoke Japanese journeys, curated for unparalleled access to the nation's hidden roots.

Your Japan Journey, Tailored.

Omakase tea experiences and private dining in Japan are often centered around the counter itself, with only a few seats ...
18/05/2026

Omakase tea experiences and private dining in Japan are often centered around the counter itself, with only a few seats and direct interaction with the host preparing each course.

Seasonal ingredients, Japanese sweets, tea pairings, and ceramics are introduced one by one, creating a slower and more personal way to experience Japanese hospitality and cuisine.

Learning about geisha culture in Kanazawa.While Kyoto’s geiko and maiko are the most internationally known, Kanazawa als...
15/05/2026

Learning about geisha culture in Kanazawa.

While Kyoto’s geiko and maiko are the most internationally known, Kanazawa also has a long-established geisha tradition centered around its historic chaya districts such as Higashi Chaya. The culture developed with its own customs, performance styles, and atmosphere, shaped by the city’s history as a wealthy castle town.

Experiences like these offer a closer look at a part of Japanese culture that is often misunderstood from the outside.

Bonsai culture in Japan is built around long-term care, sometimes across multiple generations of growers.At the Kyoto Bo...
13/05/2026

Bonsai culture in Japan is built around long-term care, sometimes across multiple generations of growers.

At the Kyoto Bonsai Garden near Daitoku-ji, visitors can see rare specimens shaped through decades of pruning, wiring, and seasonal maintenance. Some trees on display are estimated to be several hundred years old, with exhibitions rotating regularly throughout the year. 

A closer look at one of Japan’s most respected living art forms.

A fourth-generation metal craftsman working in his family workshop with more than 100 years of history.Known for produci...
08/05/2026

A fourth-generation metal craftsman working in his family workshop with more than 100 years of history.

Known for producing large singing bowls used in temples across Japan, he is now one of the very few artisans still mastering these techniques by hand. Each bowl is shaped through repeated hammering, both from the inside and outside, before being tuned by ear, a process that took him more than 12 years to fully learn independently from his father and grandfather.

His workshop also produces suzugami, thin metal pieces designed to be bent and reshaped like origami.

One of the rare opportunities in Japan to see and learn techniques that have become increasingly difficult to preserve today.

Kinkaku-ji, Kyoto.Known as the Golden Pavilion, this temple is covered in gold leaf and set beside a reflective pond. Or...
30/04/2026

Kinkaku-ji, Kyoto.

Known as the Golden Pavilion, this temple is covered in gold leaf and set beside a reflective pond. Originally built in the 14th century as a shogun’s villa, it was later converted into a Zen temple.

One of Kyoto’s most recognized sites, visited for its architecture and setting.

Private tea ceremony in Kyoto.Matcha is whisked by hand and served in a chawan, the traditional tea bowl used in Japanes...
27/04/2026

Private tea ceremony in Kyoto.

Matcha is whisked by hand and served in a chawan, the traditional tea bowl used in Japanese tea practice. The setting usually includes tatami flooring, seasonal sweets, and utensils selected according to the time of year. Every part of the ceremony follows an established order developed over centuries.

A cultural experience that offers direct access to one of Japan’s most respected traditions.

Kōmyō-in, Kyoto.One of Kyoto’s quieter temple visits, known for its Zen garden of stone, gravel, moss, and open space. T...
24/04/2026

Kōmyō-in, Kyoto.

One of Kyoto’s quieter temple visits, known for its Zen garden of stone, gravel, moss, and open space. The garden is built around balance and restraint, with details that become clearer the longer you spend there.

Far less crowded than many of the city’s larger temples, it offers a calmer side of Kyoto and a place to slow your pace for a while.

Visit our website and inquire with us to discover more places like this.

Sakura in Kyoto moves quickly and changes day by day.At this temple, branches are brought indoors and displayed before t...
11/04/2026

Sakura in Kyoto moves quickly and changes day by day.

At this temple, branches are brought indoors and displayed before they fully bloom, allowing visitors to see the flowers open gradually.

A different way to experience sakura in Kyoto.

Visit our website and inquire with us to organise your next Japan trip.

Tsukubai (蹲踞).A stone basin placed in traditional gardens and near tea rooms, where water flows gently from a bamboo spo...
06/04/2026

Tsukubai (蹲踞).

A stone basin placed in traditional gardens and near tea rooms, where water flows gently from a bamboo spout. It is used to rinse the hands before entering.

Even the basin itself carries detail. The surface and patterns come from the glaze and firing process, giving each piece a slightly different finish.

A small element, but one that reflects the attention given to even the simplest gestures in Japanese spaces.

Tea ceremony (茶の湯, Chanoyu).More than serving tea, chanoyu is a formal practice shaped by centuries of tradition. Every ...
03/04/2026

Tea ceremony (茶の湯, Chanoyu).

More than serving tea, chanoyu is a formal practice shaped by centuries of tradition. Every movement, from preparing the matcha to presenting it, follows a precise sequence that reflects discipline and cultural values.

Set in a tatami room, the ceremony uses carefully selected utensils, often with attention to seasonality and setting. The focus is placed on the act itself as much as on the tea.

Check our website to discover more cultural experiences in Japan.

Japanese folding screens (Byōbu).Originally used to divide space, byōbu also became a surface for painting and storytell...
01/04/2026

Japanese folding screens (Byōbu).

Originally used to divide space, byōbu also became a surface for painting and storytelling. Their large format allowed artists to work with movement, scale, and composition in a way that fixed walls could not.

Gold leaf was often used to reflect light and create depth, while subjects ranged from nature to mythological scenes.

Today, many of these screens are preserved as works of art, showing both technical skill and a distinct approach to space in Japanese interiors.

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