The new year resolution is a tradition, as is the breaking of the new year resolution. So, I tend to shy away from them. But I do enjoy the idea of new starts, so there are some things I’m doing differently this year.
The first is that I’m trying to bring more beauty into my life. The past few months, I’ve been working with potters more closely, and I’ve realized that using their work as part of daily life is a simple way to elevate the quotidian. And so, rather than just focusing on sake wares, I’m using handmade pottery for everything I can.

One of the last emotional holdouts for me was coffee. It’s a hard thing on cups, with its staining and oils, so the idea of drinking it from fine pottery was always somewhat uncomfortable. But when I talked to my potter friend Yagi Hiroyuki about it, he explained that he used a porcelain clay mix and a tighter glaze for coffee cups for that very reason, as well as layering food-grade silicon for cheaper wares. And then, he offered me a cup to test… So, now my daily coffee come from a handmade artisan piece.

I’ve also realized that shochu cups are… Well, cups. So, why not use them for drinking other things, like water? No more plastic, no more cheap store-bought stuff… My day is now decorated with fine pottery from artists whose faces I know, whose hands I have shaken.

It’s a little thing, but one I’m glad of. And one I recommend others think about, too. There are plenty of affordable pieces by artists with skill and creativity all over Japan, and the world. Look around you. It’s good for the soul to eat and drink from functional art.
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