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Kikuchi Hojudo Yamagata Imono Cast Iron Tetsubin Tea Kettle [2026]

Kikuchi Hojudo Yamagata Imono Cast Iron Tetsubin Tea Kettle [2026]
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Kikuchi Hojudo Yamagata Imono Cast Iron Tetsubin Tea Kettle [2026]

Yamagata Imono (山形鋳物) is one of the oldest continuously practiced metalcasting traditions in Japan — sand-casters following Minamoto no Yoriyoshi’s army during the Zenkunen War (1051–1062) found ideal molding sand along the Mabuchi and Suzukawa riverbeds and iron sand in the Mogami River basin, and set up workshops that have produced cast iron in the same district for nearly a thousand years. The Doushou-machi (銅町, “Copper Town”) foundry quarter in Yamagata City has been continuously active since the eleventh century and was designated a Traditional Craft Industry by Japan’s Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI) in 1975.

Kikuchi Hojudo (菊地保壽堂), founded in 1604, is among the oldest still-operating foundries in that district. Its tetsubin (鉄瓶, cast iron tea kettle) work is distinguished from the better-known Nambu Tetsubin of Iwate Prefecture by a noticeably thinner wall and a smoother, more restrained surface finish — a refined aesthetic that arrived in Yamagata via the Edo-period Mogami River trade routes, which carried Kamigata (Kyoto / Osaka) tea-culture sensibilities upstream into Tōhoku. The maker’s contemporary “WAZUQU” line, designed in collaboration with industrial designer Eguchi Shin, sits in that same lineage.

This guide is written for international readers considering a Yamagata Imono cast iron kettle for daily tea use — typically a 0.7–1.0 L size, thin-walled, smooth-finish, and used on a gas or induction range. We cover what the Yamagata style actually means (versus Nambu), how the maker has structured the line, the shipping and customs realities from Japan, and where to buy. We do not claim to have physically tested any specific unit; pricing and availability shift, so verify on the retailer page before purchase.

📅 Published: May 20, 2026
🔄 Updated: May 20, 2026
⏱ Reading time: ~12 min
Kikuchi Hojudo · est. 1604
Yamagata Imono
Cast Iron Tetsubin
Thin-walled, smooth-finish kettle
~0.7–1.0 L · Doushou-machi, Yamagata City

No physical product photograph is available in the source dataset for this guide. The Amazon listings show the current finish and packaging.
Data note — The Amazon US and Amazon JP listing snapshots for this article were not captured before publication, so we have not embedded a specific ASIN-level price table. The buttons below link to live search results on each platform; check those pages for current Kikuchi Hojudo inventory and authoritative pricing.

Who this is for — and who should skip it

✅ A good fit if you…
  • Want a cast iron kettle for boiling water for tea, not as a tea-ceremony chagama (茶釜).
  • Prefer a thinner, smoother Yamagata-style finish over the rougher kihada (木肌) texture of Nambu kettles.
  • Drink mid-mineral or hard tap water and want the kettle’s iron surface to soften the mouthfeel.
  • Appreciate continuous-lineage craft (the Doushou-machi foundry district predates Edo by roughly six centuries).
  • Are comfortable with hand-care: dry-firing after each use, no soap, no dishwasher.
⚠️ Probably skip if you…
  • Need an induction-safe (IH対応) kettle and have not confirmed the specific Kikuchi Hojudo SKU supports it — only a subset of the line does.
  • Want a one-touch electric kettle. Tetsubin are for stovetop use.
  • Will leave water in the kettle overnight or store it wet. Interior rust will appear quickly.
  • Expect “non-stick” behavior. The cast iron interior is not enameled (unlike a tetsu-kyūsu lined teapot).
  • Have a strict ¥10,000 budget. Authentic Yamagata Imono kettles routinely list well above that.

Product overview (from published specs)

The table below summarizes what is verifiable from the channels we surveyed for this guide. Cells marked “—” indicate the value was absent from the source snapshot and we have not substituted a guess.

Source Maker / Line Material Typical capacity Origin
Amazon US (search) Kikuchi Hojudo / WAZUQU and others Cast iron (鋳鉄) Yamagata, Japan
Amazon JP Global Store Kikuchi Hojudo (菊地保壽堂) Cast iron, thin-wall Yamagata style ~0.7–1.0 L (model-dependent) Doushou-machi, Yamagata City
Maker direct (kikuchi-hojudo.jp) WAZUQU (Eguchi Shin) Cast iron, kanji-engraved surface Made in Yamagata
Proxy services (Buyee / Tenso) Forwarder access to JP-only SKUs

Per the published Kikuchi Hojudo materials, the WAZUQU line is co-designed with industrial designer Eguchi Shin (江口 慎). Specific capacity, weight, and IH-compatibility figures vary by SKU and were not captured at the listing level in our source snapshot — verify on the product page.

📖 Glossary — key Japanese craft terms used in this article

Tetsubin (鉄瓶) — cast iron kettle used for boiling water. Distinct from a chagama (茶釜, tea-ceremony cauldron) and from a tetsu-kyūsu (鉄急須, enameled iron teapot). A tetsubin’s interior is bare iron and is meant to be heated directly.

Yamagata Imono (山形鋳物) — the metalcasting tradition centered in Yamagata City’s Doushou-machi district, in production since circa 1064. METI-designated Traditional Craft, 1975.

Nambu Tetsubin (南部鉄器) — the more internationally known cast iron tradition of Iwate Prefecture (Morioka and Mizusawa). Generally thicker-walled with a rougher kihada surface.

Doushou-machi (銅町) — literally “Copper Town.” The foundry quarter in Yamagata City. Active continuously since the eleventh century.

Kamigata (上方) — Edo-period term for the Kyoto / Osaka region. Its tea-culture aesthetics, transported up the Mogami River, shaped the Yamagata thin-wall style.

Shokunin (職人) — craftsperson; specifically one whose skill is acquired through long apprenticeship rather than formal schooling.

IH対応 (IH-taiō) — induction-compatible. Not all cast iron is IH-rated by the maker even when it is technically magnetic; check the listing.

📦 Shipping and where to buy from outside Japan

Cast iron kettles are heavy (the empty body alone typically runs 0.9–1.6 kg), so international shipping cost is a meaningful component of the total purchase price. Three practical paths exist for buyers outside Japan:

  1. Amazon US (amazon.com) — easiest for US-based buyers. Amazon US carries comparable Japanese cast iron kettles (Iwachu, Oigen, and other Nambu makers) under Prime, in USD, with no customs paperwork. Kikuchi Hojudo’s exact pieces are typically not individually listed on amazon.com; for those, see the next row.
  2. Amazon JP Global Store (amazon.co.jp) — the secondary path and the one where Kikuchi Hojudo SKUs are actually sourced. Many of the maker’s listings are flagged for international shipping; expect roughly $20–$45 USD shipping to the US or EU, faster if you choose expedited. Customs duties depend on your country’s threshold (the US de minimis is $800; the EU is €150).
  3. Proxy services (Buyee, Tenso, ZenMarket) — used when a JP listing is flagged “domestic only.” The proxy receives the package in Japan and re-ships internationally, with a service fee on top of forwarding postage. Useful for one-off pieces not on Global Store.

Tetsubin are not electrical products, so voltage is not a concern. They can sit directly on most gas burners and on many IH (induction) ranges, but only models the maker explicitly labels IH対応 are guaranteed compatible. Verify before ordering for an induction kitchen.

Price snapshot across stores

Store Item / Variant Price (USD or JPY) Notes
🇺🇸 Amazon.com (US) Browse Japanese cast iron tetsubin varies (USD) Best if you are shopping from the US — Prime shipping, USD pricing, no international customs. Amazon US carries Iwachu, Oigen, and other Nambu cast iron kettles for comparison. Kikuchi Hojudo’s exact pieces ship from Japan (next row).
🇯🇵 Amazon JP Global Store Kikuchi Hojudo tetsubin — multiple SKUs varies (JPY) — check listing Ships internationally from Japan. A specific listing-level price was not captured in the data snapshot for this article; the search link returns live results.
Maker direct (kikuchi-hojudo.jp) Full Kikuchi Hojudo and WAZUQU catalogue JPY (varies) Authoritative for the line. International shipping availability varies by SKU and country.
Proxy services (Buyee / Tenso) JP-only retail listings JPY + ~10–15% service fee + forwarding Useful when a piece is on a Japanese gallery shop or Rakuten store that does not ship abroad directly.

USD figures shown alongside JPY in this article are approximate, based on a ¥150/USD reference rate as of mid-2026. The JPY price on the actual listing is the authoritative one.

📍 Where this comes from — Yamagata, the Mogami River, and a 950-year foundry tradition

📍
Where this is made
Yamagata City (Yamagata Prefecture, Tōhoku region)
Inland basin in northeastern Honshū, ~340 km north of Tokyo (2h45m by Yamagata Shinkansen). The Mogami River, which drains the basin west to the Sea of Japan, anchored the trade routes that shaped the local cast iron aesthetic.

Yamagata City is the prefectural capital of Yamagata Prefecture, in the southwestern interior of the Tōhoku (northeastern Honshū) region. The basin is ringed by the Ōu and Asahi mountains; the Mogami River, one of the three swift rivers of old Japan, drains it westward to the Sea of Japan port of Sakata. That river was the through-line of the local economy from the Edo period (1603–1868) onward — rice, safflower (benibana), and finished metalwork moved downstream to Sakata, and from Sakata around the Tōhoku coast on the Kitamae-bune cargo ships to Osaka and Kyoto. The same route carried Kamigata refinement back upstream into Yamagata’s workshops.

The casting tradition itself predates that trade by more than half a millennium. Around 1064, sand-casters who had accompanied Minamoto no Yoriyoshi’s army during the Zenkunen War (前九年の役, 1051–1062) settled in the Yamagata basin after the campaign and discovered two raw materials that defined the next thousand years of local industry: high-quality molding sand along the Mabuchi and Suzukawa riverbeds, and iron sand in the Mogami River basin. The foundry quarter that grew up around those resources — Doushou-machi (銅町, “Copper Town”) — has been continuously active ever since.

“Yamagata Imono is older than the Edo period itself, older than European cast iron stoves, older than the founding of every Edo-castle town. The molding sand was identified during the same war that established samurai rule in Tōhoku.”

📜 Timeline — Yamagata Imono and Kikuchi Hojudo

  • 1051–1062 — Zenkunen War. Sand-casters travel north with Minamoto no Yoriyoshi.

  • c. 1064 — Ideal molding sand found at Mabuchi / Suzukawa; iron sand identified in the Mogami River basin. Foundries take root.

  • 1604 — Kikuchi Hojudo (菊地保壽堂) founded in Yamagata City.

  • 17th–18th c. — Mogami River trade routes carry Kamigata (Kyoto / Osaka) tea-culture aesthetics into Yamagata workshops. The local style shifts toward thinner walls and smoother finishes.

  • 1689 — Matsuo Bashō travels through the Mogami River region; Oku no Hosomichi records the area’s economic vitality.

  • 1975 — Yamagata Imono designated a Traditional Craft Industry by Japan’s METI.

  • 2000s — Kikuchi Hojudo launches the WAZUQU line, co-designed with industrial designer Eguchi Shin (江口 慎).

  • 2026 — Doushou-machi remains an active foundry district; Kikuchi Hojudo is one of the oldest continuously operating foundries in the line.

The aesthetic difference between Yamagata and Nambu kettles is, in this sense, a difference of trade geography rather than craft. Iwate’s Nambu Tetsubin (Morioka, Mizusawa) grew up under the patronage of the Nambu clan in a Tōhoku-internal economy; the kettles tend to be thicker, more visibly textured (kihada, “tree-bark skin”), and stylistically self-contained. Yamagata’s foundries, by contrast, were reading Osaka-influenced tea-culture catalogues a hundred years before American steel was a thing — and that taste pushed them toward thinner walls, calmer surfaces, and a more restrained spout-and-lid profile.

Yamagata Imono was formally designated a Traditional Craft Industry by Japan’s Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI) in 1975 — the same designation system that recognizes the more famous Tōhoku crafts such as Nambu Tetsubin and Akita-sugi bentwood. Doushou-machi is still a working district, not a museum quarter; the foundries that remain produce daily-use kettles, garden lanterns, ironware for the tea ceremony, and contemporary-design pieces in the WAZUQU vein.

⚖️ Yamagata vs Nambu — the cast iron tetsubin lineages at a glance
Yamagata Imono (Yamagata City)
Thinner walls, smoother surface, restrained spout / lid. Kamigata (Kyoto / Osaka) influence via the Mogami River trade. Active since c. 1064. METI Traditional Craft, 1975.

Nambu Tetsubin (Iwate)
Thicker walls, more overt arare or kihada texture, heavier in the hand. Patronage of the Nambu clan from the 17th c. METI Traditional Craft. The internationally better-known of the two lineages.

Kikuchi Hojudo itself dates to 1604 — its founding year places it in the very first generation of Edo-period commercial workshops, alongside the establishment of the Tokugawa shogunate. The maker survived four centuries of regime change, the abolition of the domain system in 1871, the Meiji industrial transition, the postwar period, and the slow contraction of regional craft industries that came with it. The WAZUQU line — kanji-engraved and designed in collaboration with Eguchi Shin — is a deliberate contemporary positioning of that lineage rather than a break from it.

What it does well

💧 Softens tap water

Iron ions released from the bare interior modify the mouthfeel of boiled water. Sencha and gyokuro brewed from kettle-boiled water taste noticeably rounder than from kettle-of-stainless equivalents — a long-documented practical reason tetsubin remain in daily use.

⚖️ Lighter than Nambu

The Yamagata thin-wall casting produces a kettle that is easier to lift than a comparably sized Nambu piece — meaningful for daily use rather than display.

🎨 Restrained surface

Smooth or modestly textured. Fits a modern dining-table aesthetic without reading as a souvenir piece. WAZUQU adds a contemporary-design layer for buyers who want that.

🪨 Decade-scale durability

Maintained properly, a tetsubin is a multi-decade object. The maker has been refining the same iron-pouring discipline since 1604 — failure modes are well understood.

Weaknesses and things to verify before buying

  1. Rust risk is real. A tetsubin left wet — even for a few hours — will develop interior rust spots quickly. The standard care routine is: pour out all water immediately after use, dry the kettle on residual heat from the burner for 30–60 seconds, store with the lid off. Buyers who would rather not think about this should pick a stainless or enameled kettle.
  2. IH (induction) compatibility is per-SKU, not universal. Not every Kikuchi Hojudo piece is rated for induction even though cast iron is magnetic. Confirm IH対応 on the specific listing before ordering for an induction range — some pieces have a curved base that does not seat properly on an IH coil.
  3. Capacity-level data was thin in the dataset for this article. Yamagata Imono kettles span roughly 0.5 L to 1.5 L; daily-use sizes cluster around 0.7–1.0 L, but our source snapshot did not capture per-SKU capacity. Read the listing carefully.
  4. Shipping weight matters. Empty body weight is typically 0.9–1.6 kg for the 0.7–1.0 L range. Add packaging and crating and international postage becomes a meaningful share of the order total. Budget $20–$45 USD for surface or expedited shipping from Japan.
  5. “Tetsubin” vs “tetsu-kyūsu” confusion is common in English listings. A tetsubin (鉄瓶) has a bare cast iron interior and is meant to be heated. A tetsu-kyūsu (鉄急須) is an enameled iron teapot used at the table and should not be put on a flame. International Amazon listings sometimes label them interchangeably; the maker’s product page is the authoritative source.
  6. Pricing in this guide is not at the SKU level. The fetched data snapshot did not include a captured ASIN or listing price for this guide; the buttons link to live search results. Cross-check the maker’s site (kikuchi-hojudo.jp) for the current retail range before pulling the trigger on a third-party listing.

Conclusion — which buyer type are you?

Premium
The WAZUQU buyer

Wants the maker’s contemporary design line, with Eguchi Shin’s surface treatment. Treats the kettle as a daily-use object that is also a piece of design.

Mainstream
The classical Yamagata buyer

Wants a thin-wall, smooth-finish daily kettle. Will use it for sencha and hōjicha most days, and would rather have a restrained surface than an arare-dotted one.

Budget
The “try first” buyer

Should consider a smaller-capacity Iwachu or Oigen Nambu kettle from Amazon US first. Adopt a Kikuchi Hojudo piece once you know you will actually use it daily.

Skip it
The convenience buyer

If you want push-button electric heating, one-pour cleaning, and dishwasher safety, a cast iron tetsubin is the wrong category. An electric stainless kettle is a better fit.

Other ways to approach this purchase

⏳ Wait for a JP year-end sale

Amazon JP runs broad promotions around late November (Black Friday JP) and early January. Cast iron pieces occasionally appear in those windows at meaningful discounts.

🔄 Buy maker-refurbished or B-grade

Yamagata foundries occasionally sell B-grade pieces with minor cosmetic casting variations at reduced price. Ask through the maker’s contact form; not always listed on Amazon.

🎁 Use Amazon JP points

If you already have Amazon JP credit from previous orders, applying it to a single high-value cast iron purchase typically gives a better effective margin than spreading it across smaller items.

🚫 Skip if uncertain

A cast iron tetsubin is a multi-decade object that punishes inconsistent care. If you are not sure you will dry it after every use, a stainless or enameled kettle will serve you better.

🏆 Editor’s Pick

🏆 Editor’s pick

Kikuchi Hojudo Yamagata Imono cast iron tetsubin (thin-wall, ~0.7–1.0 L)

For daily tea-water use, the classical thin-wall Kikuchi Hojudo tetsubin in the 0.7–1.0 L band is the most defensible starting point in the line. It captures what Yamagata Imono actually is — a thinner, smoother, calmer cast iron tradition than its better-known Nambu sibling — without leaning on the contemporary WAZUQU surface treatment. Approach the WAZUQU line once you already know you like the maker’s iron.

  • Continuous Doushou-machi production since circa 1064 (the foundry district predates the Edo period).
  • Kikuchi Hojudo itself has been operating since 1604; the line’s iron-pouring discipline is well-documented.
  • Yamagata Imono was designated a METI Traditional Craft Industry in 1975.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Does Kikuchi Hojudo’s Amazon JP listing ship internationally?
Many of the maker’s pieces appear on Amazon JP Global Store, which ships to most major destinations. Availability is per-SKU and changes over time — the Global Store badge on the listing is the authoritative indicator. If the specific piece you want is domestic-only, a proxy service such as Buyee or Tenso is the usual workaround.
What is the difference between Yamagata Imono and Nambu Tetsubin?
Yamagata Imono, from Yamagata City in Tōhoku, is characterized by thinner walls and smoother, more restrained surface finishes — a style shaped by Edo-period Mogami River trade with Kamigata (Kyoto / Osaka). Nambu Tetsubin, from Iwate Prefecture (Morioka and Mizusawa), tends to be thicker, with more overt arare or kihada texture. Both were designated METI Traditional Craft Industries in 1975.
Can I use a Kikuchi Hojudo tetsubin on an induction (IH) cooktop?
Some Kikuchi Hojudo SKUs are labeled IH対応 (IH-compatible) and some are not — even though cast iron is magnetic in principle, the maker’s rating depends on base geometry and wall thickness. Confirm the IH label on the specific listing before ordering for an induction kitchen.
How do I care for the kettle to prevent rust?
The standard routine is: pour out all water immediately after each use, place the empty kettle back on residual stove heat for 30–60 seconds to dry the interior, then store with the lid off. Do not use soap or a dishwasher. If a thin orange film appears in the kettle base over time, that is typical iron oxidation and does not damage the kettle’s function, but if loose rust flakes appear in the boiled water, the kettle has been stored wet too long and needs to be re-seasoned by repeated tea-rinsing.
Is a tetsubin the same as a Japanese cast iron teapot?
No. A tetsubin (鉄瓶) has a bare cast iron interior and is meant to be put on a heat source; the iron interacts with the water. A tetsu-kyūsu (鉄急須) is an enameled cast iron teapot used at the table to brew tea once water has already been boiled separately. International listings sometimes use the terms interchangeably, which is a translation error.
What does “WAZUQU” mean and is it different from regular Kikuchi Hojudo?
WAZUQU is Kikuchi Hojudo’s contemporary product line, co-designed with industrial designer Eguchi Shin (江口 慎). The pieces use the same Yamagata Imono casting process at the same Doushou-machi workshop but are styled with kanji or geometric surface engraving and cleaner overall silhouettes. It is a design-led extension of the maker’s traditional output, not a separate or lower-tier brand.
Why is the price not shown in this article?
The data snapshot used to prepare this guide did not include a specific ASIN-level price capture for Kikuchi Hojudo on either Amazon US or Amazon JP at the time of writing. Rather than guess a number, we link to live search results on both platforms; whatever is shown on those listing pages at the time you click is the authoritative current price.

jpmono.com is curated by a Japan-based editorial team (working out of Toyama in the Hokuriku region and Nara in Kansai) and is independent. We don’t take payment from the makers we feature; income comes from affiliate links. Read more about our editorial standards.

📢 Affiliate Disclosure — This article contains affiliate links from the Amazon Associates Program. The primary path is Amazon US (amazon.com) via search — many of these hand-forged Japanese craft items are not individually listed on amazon.com, but Amazon US carries comparable Japanese kitchen and home goods, and commissions on whatever the visitor purchases through the search link go to support this site. The secondary path is Amazon JP Global Store (amazon.co.jp), which is where the specific items covered in this guide are sourced from and which ships internationally to most major destinations. If you make a purchase through either of these links, we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. Prices and availability shown are based on data at the time of writing and may have changed — always verify at the retailer before purchasing. USD figures shown alongside JPY are approximate (¥150/USD baseline as of mid-2026); the JPY price is the authoritative one for the specific listed item.

Editorial / AI assistance note: this article was drafted with the assistance of a large language model from a structured spec and source-listing snapshot, then edited by the jpmono editorial team in Toyama and Nara. Factual claims about Yamagata Imono and Kikuchi Hojudo are drawn from the maker’s published materials and the data_notes for this article; we do not claim to have physically tested the product.

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