Home / Japanese Craft / Echizen Tansu: Iron-Fitted Wood Chest from…
Japanese Craft

Echizen Tansu: Iron-Fitted Wood Chest from Fukui, Where to Buy [2026]

Echizen Tansu: Iron-Fitted Wood Chest from Fukui, Where to Buy [2026]
📢 PR: This article contains Amazon affiliate links (US primary, Japan secondary) (details).

Echizen Tansu (越前箪笥, “Echizen chest”) is a class of nailless wooden cabinetry made in Echizen City and the wider Sabae and Echizen district of Fukui Prefecture, on the Sea of Japan side of central Japan. The cabinets pair zelkova (keyaki) fronts with paulownia (kiri) interiors, dovetailed together without nails, then finished in urushi or wiped lacquer. What sets the form apart is the heavy hand-forged iron hardware bolted across the face — the locks, corner braces, and decorative mounts that a Western reader would recognize as the most visible signature of the piece.

That ironwork is not borrowed. It grew out of Echizen’s own blacksmithing tradition, conventionally dated to around 1337, when the swordsmith Chiyozuru Kuniyasu is said to have settled in the area. The same forges that hammered out farm tools and blades later spun off the Echizen uchihamono (打刃物, “forged edged tools”) knife industry that international cooks now know well. A chest of drawers built in this town, in other words, carries both the cabinetmaker’s joinery and the blacksmith’s iron in one object — and Japan formally recognized that combination as a designated Traditional Craft (指定) in 2013.

This guide is written for readers outside Japan who are weighing a small, lacquered, iron-fitted Japanese chest as an heirloom-grade accessory cabinet rather than as flat-pack furniture. We cover what the form is, what to verify before buying, how the international purchase path works, and where the genre sits relative to other Japanese woodwork we have reviewed. The data available for the specific item at the time of writing was thin, so we flag clearly where a figure is unconfirmed rather than guessing.

🗓 Published:
🔄 Updated:
⏱ Read time: ~11 min

Small Echizen Tansu accessory chest of drawers with keyaki zelkova face, paulownia interior, and hand-forged iron kazari-kanagu fittings from Echizen City, Fukui
A compact Echizen Tansu accessory chest — zelkova drawer faces, paulownia interior, and hand-forged iron fittings. Image: Amazon product listing.

Who this is for — and who should skip it

✅ A good fit if you…
  • Want a small, lacquered cabinet you can hand down rather than replace
  • Value visible craft — exposed iron hardware, wood-grain faces, dovetailed corners
  • Already appreciate paulownia’s light weight and moisture-buffering for storage
  • Are furnishing a tea room, entryway, or desk with one deliberate object
  • Are comfortable buying a sourced item from Japan and waiting for it to ship
❌ Skip it if you…
  • Need large-volume storage — these accessory chests are small by design
  • Want a low price; hand-forged hardware and lacquer command a premium
  • Expect same-week delivery — international shipping from Japan takes time
  • Plan to keep it in a damp or full-sun spot that stresses lacquered wood
  • Prefer a uniform, machine-perfect finish over visible hand-work variation

Product overview (from published specs)

The fetched listing data for this specific chest was limited at the time of writing, so the table below combines the designated-craft profile of Echizen Tansu with the listing identifiers that were available. Where a value could not be confirmed from the data, it is marked rather than estimated.

Attribute Detail Source
Craft / form Echizen Tansu — iron-fitted wood chest Designated craft profile
Origin Echizen City (Takefu), Fukui Prefecture Designated craft profile
Body wood Zelkova (keyaki) faces, paulownia (kiri) interior Designated craft profile
Joinery Dovetailed, built without nails Designated craft profile
Finish Urushi or wiped lacquer Designated craft profile
Hardware Hand-forged iron kazari-kanagu, locks, corner braces Designated craft profile
Designation Traditional Craft, designated 2013 Designated craft profile
Item ID (ASIN) B07MVV6KSQ Amazon JP Global Store
Dimensions / weight Unconfirmed — check listing
Price Unconfirmed at time of writing — check listing

Note on data: the fetched data set for this item returned no live price or dimension fields at the time of writing. Treat the listing itself as authoritative for current price, size, and availability.

📖 Glossary — key terms
  • tansu (箪笥) — a traditional Japanese chest of drawers or cabinet.
  • keyaki (欅, “zelkova”) — a hard, strongly figured hardwood prized for cabinet faces.
  • kiri (桐, “paulownia”) — an extremely light wood that buffers humidity, used for drawer interiors and storage boxes.
  • kazari-kanagu (飾り金具, “decorative metal fittings”) — the iron mounts, pulls, and corner braces fixed to the cabinet face.
  • urushi (漆, “lacquer”) — natural lacquer from the urushi tree, applied in coats and polished.
  • uchihamono (打刃物, “forged edged tools”) — Echizen’s forged knives, from the same blacksmith lineage as the chest hardware.
  • shokunin (職人, “artisan”) — a skilled craftsperson working within a named trade tradition.

Which finish should you choose?

This piece is listed in 4 options. The photos below are the actual サイズ options on the listing right now — pick the one you want and confirm it on the product page before ordering, since hand-finished wares vary slightly piece to piece.

📌 How does it compare?

Related jpmono guides on Japanese woodwork, joinery, and the same blade town — useful for placing this chest in context.

Where this comes from

📍
Where this is made
Echizen City (Fukui Prefecture, Chūbu / Hokuriku)
Sea of Japan coast, roughly 350 km west of Tokyo and about 100 km northeast of Kyoto, ringed by snow-heavy mountains.

Fukui Fukui, Chūbu

📍 Fukui sits on the Sea of Japan coast in the Hokuriku region of central Honshu — roughly 350 km west of Tokyo and about 100 km northeast of Kyoto, behind snow-heavy mountain ranges.

Fukui faces the Sea of Japan on the inner, weather-side coast of central Honshu. Winters here are long and snowbound — the Hokuriku region records some of the heaviest seasonal snowfall in the country — and that climate did more than test roofs. It pushed rural households indoors for months at a time, and indoor months favored indoor crafts: weaving, paper-making, lacquering, and cabinetmaking. The valleys around Echizen had the timber, the water for finishing work, and the long quiet season that fine joinery rewards.

Maruoka Castle wooden keep in Sakai, Fukui Prefecture
Maruoka Castle in Sakai, Fukui, has Japan’s oldest surviving wooden keep — evidence of the region’s deep timber joinery and carpentry tradition that underpins Echizen Tansu. — Photo: Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 2.1 jp)

The region’s making culture has deep roots. Eiheiji, the head temple of the Sōtō school of Zen, was founded in the Fukui mountains in 1244 and brought with it a discipline of woodwork, joinery, and lacquered fittings. Two centuries later the Asakura clan built their fortified town at Ichijodani and concentrated smiths, carpenters, and other craftspeople in a single valley. And at Maruoka stands a wooden castle keep often described as the oldest of its kind still standing in Japan — a standing argument for how seriously this corner of the country took timber construction.

📜 Timeline — Echizen craft lineage
  • 1244 — Eiheiji, the Sōtō Zen head temple, is founded in the Fukui mountains.
  • c. 1337 — Swordsmith Chiyozuru Kuniyasu settles in Echizen, seeding the local blacksmith tradition.
  • 15th–16th c. — The Asakura clan’s castle town at Ichijodani concentrates smiths and craftsmen in one valley.
  • 16th c. — Maruoka Castle’s wooden keep is built, now regarded as Japan’s oldest surviving keep.
  • Edo period — Cabinetmakers combine keyaki and kiri joinery with local hand-forged ironwork into the tansu form.
  • 2013 — Echizen Tansu is formally designated a Traditional Craft.
  • 2026 — Chests are still built in Echizen City, alongside the town’s knife forges.
Reconstructed gate at the Ichijodani Asakura clan historic ruins in Fukui
The Ichijodani Asakura clan ruins preserve a 15th–16th century castle town where the Asakura concentrated smiths and craftsmen — the milieu that fostered Echizen’s ironwork. — Photo: Wikimedia Commons (CC BY 2.5)

The iron is the part to understand. Echizen’s blacksmithing is conventionally traced to around 1337 and the arrival of the swordsmith Chiyozuru Kuniyasu. Over the following centuries the same forges that supplied blades and farm sickles learned to beat out the locks, hinges, corner braces, and broad decorative mounts that a tansu carries on its face. This is the lineage that later produced Echizen uchihamono, the forged kitchen knives now exported worldwide. A chest from this town is, quite literally, cabinetmaking and blacksmithing bolted together.

“A chest built where the knives are forged carries both trades in one object — the joiner’s dovetail and the smith’s iron, made to outlast the buyer.”

Chokushimon gate at Eiheiji Temple in Eiheiji-cho, Fukui
Eihei-ji, the Sōtō Zen head temple founded in Fukui in 1244, embodies the disciplined craftsmanship and lacquered woodwork central to the prefecture’s making culture. — Photo: Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0)

The finishing tells the second half of the story. Echizen Tansu is finished in urushi or wiped lacquer — coats of natural lacquer rubbed back to bring up the keyaki grain rather than to hide it. That same lacquering discipline runs through the wider Fukui making culture, from temple woodwork down to the wiped-lacquer chest in front of you. The drawer interiors use paulownia, the lightest of Japanese cabinet woods, valued because it swells slightly to seal against humidity and then releases it — traditionally believed to protect textiles and paper stored inside.

Tojinbo basalt cliffs on the Sea of Japan coast of Fukui
The Tojinbo basalt cliffs mark Fukui’s Sea-of-Japan coast, whose long snowbound winters historically pushed artisans toward indoor crafts like cabinetmaking. — Photo: Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 3.0)

What “still made here” means in practice is that the chest, the lacquering, and the iron all stay within the same Fukui district that has supported these trades for centuries. The 2013 Traditional Craft designation is recent on paper, but it formalizes a continuity that the timeline above makes plain — and it is why a small Echizen accessory chest is priced and built as a multi-generation object rather than a seasonal furniture purchase.

📦 Shipping & where to buy from outside Japan

The specific chest in this guide is sourced from the Amazon JP Global Store, which ships many household items internationally to most major destinations. For a wooden, lacquered, iron-fitted cabinet, expect international shipping to add meaningfully to the total — small-parcel rates to the US and EU commonly run in the $15–$40 range, and a bulkier or heavier chest can sit well above that. Always confirm the shipping quote and the delivery estimate on the listing before ordering.

If the Global Store does not ship the exact item to your country, a Japan-based proxy service (Buyee or Tenso) can forward it: you buy through the proxy’s Japan address, they consolidate and re-ship internationally. This adds a service fee and a second shipping leg, but it unlocks listings that are otherwise Japan-only.

One customs note: orders above your country’s de minimis threshold may attract import duty or VAT on arrival. For a single mid-value chest this is usually modest, but it is the buyer’s responsibility, not the seller’s. There is no electrical or voltage concern here — this is a wooden cabinet, not an appliance.

⚖️ Keyaki vs Kiri — why this chest uses both
Keyaki (zelkova) — the face
Hard, dense, strongly figured. Takes lacquer well and shows off grain; used where the cabinet is seen and handled.

Kiri (paulownia) — the interior
Very light, moisture-buffering, insect-resistant by tradition. Used for drawer boxes to protect textiles and paper.

Price snapshot across stores

JPY is the authoritative price for the specific sourced listing; USD figures elsewhere are approximate at a ¥150/USD baseline. The live price for this item was not present in the fetched data at the time of writing, so confirm current figures at the listing.

Store Item / Variant Price Notes
🇺🇸 Amazon.com (US) Browse Japanese wood chests & cabinets varies (USD) Best if you’re shopping from the US — Prime shipping, USD pricing, no international customs. Amazon US carries Japanese paulownia boxes and small cabinets from various makers; the exact Echizen chest is sourced from Japan (next row).
🇯🇵 Amazon JP Global Store Echizen Tansu accessory chest (ASIN B07MVV6KSQ) ¥ — see listing (price not in data at time of writing) Ships internationally from Japan. This is the sourced listing for the exact item covered here.
Maker direct Echizen-area cabinetmakers varies (¥) Some workshops sell direct or accept commissions; international shipping varies by workshop.
Proxy services (Buyee / Tenso) Forward a Japan-only listing item price + fees Use when the Global Store will not ship to your country; adds a service fee and a second shipping leg.

What it does well

🔨 Hardware as the signature
Hand-forged iron mounts and braces from the same blacksmith town as Echizen knives — the most visible mark of the form.

🪵 Joinery built to last
Dovetailed and assembled without nails, so the structure relies on wood-to-wood joints rather than fasteners that loosen.

🌿 Paulownia interior
Light, humidity-buffering kiri drawers — traditionally favored for storing textiles, documents, and small valuables.

🏅 Designated heritage
Recognized as a Traditional Craft in 2013, made within one continuous Fukui district with a centuries-long lineage.

Weaknesses and things to verify before buying

  1. Price and dimensions were not in the fetched data. Confirm both on the listing before ordering; do not assume size from photos alone.
  2. Small by design. Accessory chests of this type hold jewelry, stationery, or small textiles — not bulk storage. Check internal drawer dimensions against what you intend to store.
  3. International shipping adds cost and time. A wooden cabinet is heavier and bulkier than typical small parcels; factor the quote and lead time into your decision.
  4. Lacquer and solid wood need a stable environment. Avoid prolonged direct sun, radiators, or damp; sudden humidity swings can stress lacquered solid-wood furniture over time.
  5. Hand-work means variation. Grain, lacquer sheen, and iron finish will differ piece to piece. If you expect machine-uniform consistency, this is the wrong category.
  6. Customs and duties may apply above your country’s threshold — budget for the possibility.
  7. Returns on cross-border craft items can be slow or limited. Read the seller’s return policy before purchase.

Conclusion — which buyer type are you?

💎 Premium / heirloom buyer
You want the designated craft, the hand-forged iron, and the lacquered keyaki face. This chest is squarely for you — buy the authentic sourced piece.

🎯 Mainstream buyer
You like the look and the heritage but want to compare. Browse Japanese cabinets and paulownia boxes on Amazon US first, then weigh the sourced JP item.

💰 Budget buyer
Hand-forged hardware and lacquer carry a premium. If budget is the priority, a plain paulownia storage box gives you the wood benefits at far lower cost.

🚫 Skip it
You need large-volume storage, fast delivery, or a uniform machine finish. This category will frustrate you on all three — look at flat-pack furniture instead.

Other ways to approach this purchase

⏳ Wait for a sale
Craft listings move slowly, but exchange-rate shifts can change your effective price. A favorable yen rate is its own discount.

🔁 Pre-owned / vintage
Older tansu turn up on Japanese secondhand and auction channels; quality varies, and a proxy service can forward them.

🎁 Points & rewards
If you buy through Amazon regularly, card points or Amazon rewards can offset part of the shipping premium on a cross-border order.

🚫 Skip it
If the use case is bulk storage or you want a disposable piece, a designated-craft chest is the wrong tool — and that is a fine conclusion to reach.

🏆 Editor’s Pick

🏆 Editor’s Pick — the Echizen Tansu we’d start with

Echizen Tansu small keyaki/kiri accessory chest with hand-forged iron kazari-kanagu (Echizen City, Fukui · ASIN B07MVV6KSQ)

If you want one Echizen chest to represent the form, this compact accessory cabinet is the place to begin. It carries the three things that define the craft — the lacquered zelkova face, the paulownia interior, and the hand-forged iron hardware from the same town as Echizen knives — at a footprint that fits a desk, entryway, or tea room.

  • Designated Traditional Craft (2013) with a documented Fukui lineage.
  • Nailless dovetailed construction built for multi-generation use.
  • Sourced from the Amazon JP Global Store with international shipping.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Does the Amazon JP Global Store ship Echizen Tansu internationally?

Many household items on the Amazon JP Global Store ship to most major destinations, and this chest is sourced from that store. Because a wooden cabinet is bulkier than a small parcel, confirm the shipping quote and delivery estimate on the listing before ordering, and use a proxy service such as Buyee or Tenso if the Global Store will not ship to your country.

Why does this chest use two different woods?

Keyaki (zelkova) is hard and strongly figured, so it is used for the visible, handled faces and takes lacquer well. Kiri (paulownia) is very light and buffers humidity, so it is used for the drawer interiors to protect textiles and paper. Combining them puts each wood where its properties matter most.

What makes the iron hardware special?

The locks, corner braces, and decorative mounts are hand-forged in Echizen, whose blacksmithing tradition is conventionally traced to around 1337. The same forge lineage later produced Echizen uchihamono kitchen knives, so the hardware on the chest and the town’s knives share a craft origin.

How do I care for a lacquered, iron-fitted wood chest?

Keep it out of prolonged direct sun and away from radiators or damp, and wipe it with a soft dry cloth. Avoid harsh solvents on the lacquer. Stable indoor humidity is the main thing — sudden swings stress lacquered solid wood over time.

Is this large enough to use as a main dresser?

No. Accessory chests of this type are small by design and suit jewelry, stationery, documents, or small textiles rather than bulk clothing storage. Check the internal drawer dimensions on the listing against what you plan to keep in it.

Will I pay customs duties when it arrives?

Possibly. Orders above your country’s de minimis threshold may attract import duty or VAT on arrival, which is the buyer’s responsibility. For a single mid-value chest this is usually modest, but budget for the possibility.

Why is no price shown for the specific item?

The fetched data set returned no live price or dimension fields for this listing at the time of writing. Rather than guess, we direct you to the listing, which is authoritative for current price, size, and availability.


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 do not take payment from the makers we feature; income comes from affiliate links. We do not physically test every product — we read maker specs and source listings.

📢 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.

This article was prepared with AI assistance and reviewed against the source listing data available at the time of writing. Facts about the craft and region are drawn from the provided data notes; figures not present in the data are marked as unconfirmed.

Affiliate disclosure: jpmono.com may earn a commission on qualifying purchases made through links on this page, at no additional cost to you.