All Object Lessons
Belief & Identity

The Netsuke: A Tiny Japanese World on a Cord

⏱ 45 minutes 🎓 Primary & Secondary 📚 history, art, ethics, citizenship, language
Core question How did a practical toggle to hold up a man's pouch become one of the world's most refined miniature art forms — and what does a 5 cm carving of a sleeping dog teach us about beauty, craft, and the worth of small things?
A netsuke by Gechu showing a shaggy dog and her pup. Netsuke were small carved toggles, usually 3-5 cm across, used by Japanese men in the Edo period to attach pouches to their kimono sashes. They became one of Japan's most refined miniature art forms. Photo: Siowtuze / Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA 4.0
Introduction

In Edo-period Japan (1603-1868), men wore kimono. Kimono have no pockets. So how did a Japanese man carry his money, his pipe, his tobacco, his medicines, his personal seal? He hung small containers, called sagemono, from a cord attached to his sash (obi). The containers might be a small lacquered box (inrō) for medicines, a tobacco pouch, a pipe case, or a money purse. The cord ran up from the container, over the sash, and was held at the top by a small toggle. The toggle was called a netsuke. The word combines two Japanese characters: 'ne' (root, base) and 'tsuke' (attached). At first, netsuke were practical and plain. A piece of root, a polished stone, a simple shape of wood. Their job was to be too big to slip through the sash, holding the pouch in place. But as Edo-period Japan developed its rich urban culture, the netsuke became a place for craftsmen to show their skill. Master carvers spent weeks on a single piece. They worked in boxwood and ivory and other precious materials. They carved animals, mythical creatures, gods of luck, scenes from daily life, characters from folk tales, beautiful women, ugly demons, fruits, vegetables, household objects — the whole range of Japanese imagination, all in 3-5 cm. The merchant class in Edo-period Japan was officially below the samurai but often wealthier. Sumptuary laws restricted what merchants could wear and display. Jewellery was not part of the Japanese tradition for men. Netsuke became one of the few ways a man could carry visible craftsmanship — a tiny object of high art, hanging discreetly from his sash. By the late 1800s, when Japan opened to the West and adopted Western clothing, the netsuke's practical use disappeared. But by then, Western collectors had discovered them. Netsuke became prized art objects. The greatest collections are now in museums in London, Baltimore, New York, Stockholm, and Paris. Today, master carvers in Japan, Europe, and the United States continue to make new netsuke — no longer for use with kimono, but for collectors who recognise the tradition. This lesson asks how a practical toggle became fine art, what netsuke teach us about miniature craftsmanship, and what a tiny carving can hold.

The object
Origin
Japan. Developed during the Edo period (1603-1868) as a practical solution to the lack of pockets in traditional Japanese clothing. Carving traditions established in Osaka, Kyoto, Edo (Tokyo), and other cities, with regional schools developing distinctive styles.
Period
In daily use from the early 1600s until the late 1800s, when Japan began adopting Western clothing during the Meiji period (1868-1912). The peak of artistic netsuke carving was the 18th and 19th centuries. Modern netsuke continue to be made by master carvers today.
Made of
Most often boxwood (which carves cleanly and is durable). Also ivory (now usually mammoth ivory, hippopotamus tooth, or boar tusk; elephant ivory is now banned). Other materials include wood from cherry, persimmon, ebony; horn; lacquer; ceramic; metal; bamboo root; tagua nut (vegetable ivory). Modern netsuke also use synthetic ivory.
Size
Almost always between 2.5 and 7.5 cm across. Most are 3-5 cm. They had to be small enough to wear comfortably under a kimono sash but large enough not to slip through. The two cord holes (himotoshi) are essential for any functional netsuke.
Number of objects
Tens of thousands of netsuke survive in museums and private collections worldwide. Major collections include the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, the Walters Art Museum in Baltimore, the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the British Museum, the Museum of Far Eastern Antiquities in Stockholm, and many others. Active carvers continue to make new netsuke today.
Where it is now
Held in major museums worldwide. Bought and sold by collectors. Made by contemporary master carvers in Japan, Europe, and the United States. The International Netsuke Society organises exhibitions and supports new carvers. Some netsuke are still worn for traditional dress on special occasions in Japan.
Before you teach this — reflect

Questions for you

  1. The netsuke is one of Japan's most refined craft traditions. How will you teach it as more than 'a small Japanese curio'?
  2. Many netsuke were made of ivory, which raises modern concerns about endangered species. How will you teach this honestly?
  3. Netsuke have very specific cultural and historical context. How will you teach this without reducing them to 'cute' or 'exotic' objects?

Common student difficulties — tick any you have noticed

Discovery sequence
1
Imagine being a Japanese merchant in the city of Edo (now Tokyo) in the year 1750. Edo is one of the world's largest cities — perhaps a million people, more than London or Paris at the time. You are wealthy, but you are also officially in the merchant class — third in the social order, below the samurai (warriors) and the farmers (who grow the country's food). Sumptuary laws restrict what you can wear and display. You cannot wear silk in some places. You cannot wear weapons. You cannot wear samurai regalia. You cannot show your wealth in obvious ways. But you wear a kimono. Kimono have no pockets. You need to carry small things — your money, your seal, your pipe, your medicines. You hang them from your sash in a sagemono, a 'hanging thing'. The sagemono is held up by a small toggle at the top of the cord — the netsuke. The netsuke is necessary. It is also discreet. It hangs at the side of your kimono, mostly hidden by your sleeve. But when you reach for your pouch, you handle the netsuke. When friends gather, you can compare each other's netsuke. When you sit in a tea house, your netsuke is one of the few personal objects you display. The netsuke becomes the place where you can show your taste, your wealth, your cleverness. Not in showy ways — that would break the rules. In subtle ways. A netsuke might be carved with a pun, a literary reference, a small joke. The wealthier the merchant, the more delicately carved the netsuke. Why might a society develop refined craft in unexpected places?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Because human beings always find ways to express themselves, even within constraints. The Edo merchant class was rich but socially restricted. Their wealth had to go somewhere. Some went into the elaborate decoration of homes (which could be hidden inside walls). Some went into food — the high cuisine of kaiseki and sushi developed in this period. Some went into fashion that the rules allowed — the lining of kimono, which only the wearer could see, was sometimes more elaborate than the outside. And some went into netsuke. The principle of 'iki' — a Japanese aesthetic concept of sophisticated restraint — applied. The netsuke could be precious without being ostentatious. The deeper point is that constraints often produce creativity. When you cannot do the obvious thing (display wealth openly), you do something more interesting (small object of high craftsmanship). Many other cultures have similar patterns: Russian icons developed under Orthodox restrictions on images; Hindu temple sculpture flourished where painting was less developed; Islamic calligraphy and geometric patterns flourished where figurative art was discouraged. Students should see that 'rules' often shape art in unexpected ways. The netsuke is one of the world's clearest examples.

2
A netsuke is small. Most are between 3 and 5 centimetres across. Yet a master carver might spend weeks on a single piece. Why so long? Because everything is detailed. Take a netsuke of a sleeping cat. The carver has to render the curve of the body, the soft round head, the closed eyes, the curled paws, the tail wrapped around the body. Each strand of fur is suggested by tiny chisel marks. The cat's whiskers are barely visible lines. The texture of the cat's nose is just slightly different from the texture of its fur. All of this is done with hand tools — small chisels, gouges, knives, files. A netsuke carver might use over 700 different tools. Each tool is for a specific job — undercutting a curl of fur, smoothing a paw, defining the line between cheek and ear. The carver has to think backwards. The wood or ivory starts as a small block. Every detail is removed material. If you carve too deep, you cannot put it back. The carver has to plan every cut. The carver also has to think about touch. A netsuke is not just looked at. It is held, turned over, run between fingers. A good netsuke is pleasant to handle. The carved features should not catch on clothing or skin. The two cord holes (himotoshi) must be placed so the netsuke hangs correctly when worn — not too close to the front, not too far back. The whole object should sit comfortably in the hand and against the body. Schools of netsuke carving developed in different cities. The Kyoto school was known for elegant restraint. The Osaka school was known for elaborate detail. The Edo (Tokyo) school developed in the late Edo period and emphasised everyday subjects. Each school had master carvers who trained apprentices for years. Why might a small object require so much skill?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Because skill is partly about precision. A small object must be precisely carved or it looks crude. There is no room for error. A 50 cm sculpture might forgive a slightly imperfect curve. A 3 cm sculpture cannot. Every cut shows. The deeper point is that scale matters in different ways for different art forms. Large work demands strength and overall vision. Small work demands precision and patience. Each is hard. Each takes years to master. Compare with other miniature traditions: Persian miniature painting, Indian Mughal painting, European illuminated manuscripts, Chinese carved cinnabar, Russian Faberge eggs. Each developed in a culture that valued precision and patience. Each took years of training. Students should see that 'small' does not mean 'easy'. The netsuke is one of the world's clearest examples of small-scale mastery. End the discovery here.

3
The subjects of netsuke covered the whole range of Japanese imagination. Animals were extremely common — the twelve animals of the zodiac (rat, ox, tiger, rabbit, dragon, snake, horse, goat, monkey, rooster, dog, pig), but also frogs, fish, octopuses, butterflies, snails, and many others. Animals were popular because they were beautiful, because they had symbolic meanings, and because they could be carved in interesting positions — curled up, sleeping, climbing, eating. Mythological figures were also common. The Seven Lucky Gods of Japanese folklore (Daikokuten, Ebisu, Bishamonten, Benzaiten, Fukurokuju, Jurojin, Hotei) appeared often. Daruma, the patron of perseverance and the founder of Zen Buddhism, was a popular subject. Oni (demons), kappa (water spirits), tanuki (raccoon dogs with magical powers) were all carved. Daily life subjects appeared too. A merchant carrying goods. A farmer with a hoe. A monk asking for alms. A sumo wrestler. A craftsman at work. A woman doing laundry. A child playing with a kite. The full range of Japanese life appeared in 3 cm wood or ivory. Sometimes netsuke depicted foreigners — usually Dutch traders, who were the only Europeans allowed to visit Japan during most of the Edo period (which restricted foreign contact). The Dutch traders, with their large hats and unfamiliar clothing, were exotic and interesting subjects. Netsuke could also be jokes. A common type showed a 'foxwitch' — a fox spirit who could change into a beautiful woman to deceive humans. The netsuke might show the woman's beautiful face, but with a fox tail peeking out from under her kimono. The joke was readable to anyone who knew the folklore. What does this range teach us?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

That a small object can hold a whole culture. The netsuke catalogue is essentially a catalogue of Edo Japan — its gods, its animals, its myths, its work, its humour, its fears, its delights. Everything that mattered to ordinary Japanese life appeared somewhere in netsuke. The deeper point is that a culture's everyday objects often record the culture more completely than its high art does. High art often shows what is supposed to be important. Everyday objects show what people actually thought about, joked about, feared. The netsuke shows Edo Japan from the inside. Compare with other 'small everyday objects' that have similar value: medieval European playing cards (which show the four estates of medieval society); Persian miniature paintings (which show daily life as well as court scenes); West African talking drum repertoire (which preserves proverbs, jokes, and history). Students should see that 'small' does not mean 'unimportant'. Small things often carry more cultural weight than big things. The netsuke is a particularly clear example. Through 5 cm of carved wood, you can see the whole world that produced it.

4
In 1853, the American Commodore Matthew Perry arrived in Japan with a fleet of warships, demanding that Japan open to trade with the United States. Japan had been mostly closed to foreigners for over 200 years. The arrival of Perry was a shock. By 1868, the old samurai government had fallen. The new Meiji government decided that Japan must modernise rapidly to compete with Western powers. Westernisation included clothing. The Meiji emperor and his officials began wearing Western suits. The samurai were ordered to cut their topknots. By the late 1800s, urban Japanese men were wearing trousers with pockets. The kimono and the sagemono and the netsuke were no longer needed for daily life. The netsuke could have died. But it did not. By the 1860s and 1870s, Western collectors had begun visiting Japan and buying netsuke as art objects. Japanese carvers found a new market. They began making netsuke specifically for export — sometimes more elaborate, sometimes more obviously 'Japanese' for foreign tastes. The greatest collections of netsuke ended up in Western museums. The Victoria and Albert Museum in London has thousands. The Walters Art Museum in Baltimore has a great collection. The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. The British Museum. Many other museums followed. Meanwhile, in Japan, the tradition continued in a smaller way. Modern master carvers — Ryushi Komada (b. 1934, third generation), Tadamine Nakagawa, and others — kept the skills alive. Women carvers, traditionally rare in this male-dominated craft, have become more prominent. Asuka Kajiura, originally a broadcaster, became a netsuke carver in adulthood and now teaches the craft. The International Netsuke Society, founded in 1976, supports both collectors and carvers. Modern netsuke can sell for thousands or even tens of thousands of dollars. The art is alive. A modern question is materials. Many traditional netsuke were made of elephant ivory, which is now illegal to trade because of the threat to elephant populations. Modern carvers use boxwood, mammoth ivory (from extinct mammoths preserved in Siberian permafrost), tagua nut (vegetable ivory), and other sustainable materials. What is the netsuke today?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

A living tradition that almost died and was saved by collectors. A miniature art form that has crossed cultures and centuries. An example of how craft can survive when its original purpose disappears. A reminder that small objects can hold great value. The contemporary netsuke world includes traditional Japanese carvers, collectors worldwide, museums with major holdings, an international society, and emerging carvers from many countries. Some carvers innovate (using new materials, new subjects, new styles); some maintain strict traditional approaches. Both are valid. The materials question matters. Carvers who use modern materials — mammoth ivory, hippopotamus tusk legally sourced, tagua nut, boxwood — can keep the tradition alive without harming elephants. The International Netsuke Society and many auction houses now actively reject elephant ivory netsuke made after 1947 (when international elephant ivory restrictions began). Students should see that 'tradition' and 'change' are not opposites. The netsuke tradition has survived precisely by changing — new materials, new markets, new makers. End the discovery here. The next netsuke is being carved now. The tiny world continues.

What this object teaches

A netsuke is a Japanese miniature carved toggle, traditionally used to hold a man's pouch (sagemono) onto his kimono sash (obi). The Japanese kimono has no pockets, so men used cords to hang containers — including small lacquered boxes (inrō) for medicines, tobacco pouches, money purses — from their sashes. The cord ran up from the container, over the sash, and was held at the top by a netsuke toggle. Netsuke were used in everyday life from the early 1600s. During the Edo period (1603-1868), they developed from plain practical toggles into one of Japan's most refined miniature art forms. Master carvers spent weeks on single pieces, working in boxwood, ivory, and other materials, with subjects ranging from animals and gods to scenes of daily life. Most netsuke are 3-5 cm across, but contain extraordinary detail. Schools of carving developed in Kyoto, Osaka, Edo (Tokyo), and other cities. The Edo merchant class found netsuke a way to display refined taste despite sumptuary laws restricting their dress. When Japan modernised during the Meiji period (1868-1912), kimono use declined and the netsuke's practical purpose disappeared. The tradition was saved by Western collectors who recognised the artistic value. Major collections now exist in the Victoria and Albert Museum, the Walters Art Museum, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and others. Modern master carvers continue the tradition today, with women carvers like Asuka Kajiura playing increasing roles. The International Netsuke Society supports the worldwide community. Materials today emphasise sustainable choices: boxwood, mammoth ivory, tagua nut, hippopotamus tusk legally sourced. Elephant ivory netsuke made after 1947 are no longer accepted by major auction houses.

DateEventWhat changed
Early 1600sNetsuke begin to be used in daily lifeEdo period begins; merchants and samurai use netsuke as practical toggles
1700sCarving tradition developsMaster carvers begin making elaborate netsuke; schools form in Kyoto and Osaka
Late 1700s-mid 1800sPeak periodEdo school develops; sophisticated subjects, materials, and techniques refine the craft
1853Commodore Perry arrives in JapanJapan begins opening to the West; the end of the Edo period approaches
1868Meiji period begins; Westernisation acceleratesKimono use declines; netsuke's practical purpose fading
Late 1800sWestern collectors discover netsukeTradition saved by export market; great collections begin forming abroad
1947International elephant ivory restrictions beginMajor auction houses reject post-1947 elephant ivory netsuke
1976International Netsuke Society foundedWorldwide community for carvers, collectors, and scholars
TodayLiving traditionMaster carvers continue; women carvers prominent; sustainable materials standard
Key words
Netsuke (根付)
A Japanese miniature carved toggle, used to attach a pouch or container to the sash of a kimono. Made from boxwood, ivory, and other materials. Traditionally 3-5 cm across. The word combines 'ne' (root) and 'tsuke' (attached).
Example: Most netsuke have two small holes (himotoshi) carved through them so a cord can be threaded through. The placement of the holes is important — they must allow the netsuke to hang correctly when worn.
Sagemono (下げ物)
The hanging containers attached to a kimono sash by a cord and held in place by a netsuke. Common types include the inrō (medicine box), tobacco pouch (tabako-ire), pipe case (kiseru-zutsu), money purse, and seal case.
Example: A complete set of sagemono with netsuke included the box, the cord, the netsuke (top toggle), and an ojime (sliding bead in the middle of the cord that controlled how tightly the box closed). All four parts together formed a coordinated outfit.
Edo period
The historical period in Japan from 1603 to 1868, named after the city of Edo (now Tokyo). A long period of peace and prosperity under the Tokugawa shogunate. The high point of Japanese urban culture, including kabuki theatre, ukiyo-e prints, and netsuke carving.
Example: During the Edo period, Japan was largely closed to foreigners (a policy called sakoku, 'closed country'). Only the Dutch and Chinese were allowed limited trading access. This isolation contributed to the distinctive development of many Japanese arts, including netsuke.
Katabori (形彫)
The most common type of netsuke — a three-dimensional figural carving 'in the round'. Animals, people, mythological creatures, objects. Most netsuke in major collections are katabori.
Example: Other netsuke types include manjū (round and flat, named after a sweet bun), ryūsa (lacy openwork), kagamibuta (with a metal lid), and sashi (long, thrust through the sash). Each type has its own carving style and use.
Sumptuary laws
Laws that restrict what people can wear, eat, or display based on their social class. Common in Edo Japan, where merchants were officially forbidden from wearing silk in certain places, displaying wealth openly, or owning samurai regalia.
Example: The merchant class responded to sumptuary laws with subtle expressions of wealth — elaborate kimono linings (visible only to the wearer), refined food, and miniature crafts like netsuke. The constraint produced more sophisticated forms of expression.
International Netsuke Society
International organisation founded in 1976 to support netsuke collecting, scholarship, and contemporary carving. Holds conventions, publishes a journal, and connects collectors worldwide. Plays a role in establishing standards for legal and ethical practice (especially regarding ivory).
Example: The Society's journal, the International Netsuke Society Journal, has been published quarterly since 1981. Membership includes collectors, scholars, museum curators, and contemporary carvers from over 30 countries.
Use this in other subjects
  • History: Build a class timeline: Edo period begins (1603), netsuke use spreads (early 1600s), schools of carving develop (1700s), peak period (late 1700s-mid 1800s), Perry arrives (1853), Meiji modernisation (1868 onwards), Western collecting begins (late 1800s), International Netsuke Society founded (1976). The story spans over 400 years.
  • Art: Each student designs a 'personal netsuke' on paper — a small symbolic object that represents something important to them. The design must work in 3-5 cm: simple shape, recognisable subject, two cord holes. Discuss: making something small that still works as art is harder than making something large.
  • Citizenship: Netsuke developed partly because of sumptuary laws restricting merchant display. Discuss: how do legal restrictions shape what people make and wear? Compare with other examples — modesty laws in various religions, school uniforms, sportswear regulations, dress codes at work. Restrictions often produce creativity.
  • Ethics: Many traditional netsuke were made of elephant ivory, now illegal to trade. Discuss: should museums display old ivory netsuke? Should new ivory netsuke ever be made? How does the protection of endangered species interact with the preservation of cultural traditions? Strong answers will see this is genuinely contested.
  • Language: Netsuke names often contain Japanese characters with multiple meanings. The word 'netsuke' (ne-tsuke = root-attached) is itself a literal description. Discuss: how does language shape the way objects are understood? The English word 'toggle' captures only part of what netsuke means.
  • Science: Netsuke carving is a study in materials. Boxwood is dense and carves cleanly. Ivory is harder but more uniform. Tagua nut is bone-like but vegetable. Discuss: why do different materials suit different artistic effects? What modern materials might work for similar miniature carving?
Common misconceptions
Wrong

Netsuke are just small Japanese souvenirs.

Right

Netsuke are one of Japan's most refined miniature art forms, with master carvers spending weeks on individual pieces. They are held in major museums worldwide and are recognised as fine art. The cheap tourist netsuke sold to visitors are imitations of a serious tradition.

Why

Treating netsuke as 'souvenirs' undersells what they actually are.

Wrong

Netsuke were worn by Japanese women.

Right

Netsuke were almost exclusively worn by Japanese men. Japanese women's kimono were tied differently, and women used different solutions for carrying small items — typically pouches kept inside the sleeves. Netsuke as personal accessories were a male tradition.

Why

Assuming gender-neutral or feminine use erases the actual social context.

Wrong

All netsuke are made of ivory.

Right

Netsuke were made from many materials. Boxwood was the most common. Other materials included other woods, lacquer, ceramic, metal, horn, bamboo root, tagua nut, and various ivories (elephant, hippopotamus, walrus, mammoth, boar). Modern carvers avoid elephant ivory entirely.

Why

'All ivory' is not accurate and supports the false idea that the netsuke tradition required elephant exploitation.

Wrong

Netsuke are a dying tradition.

Right

Master carvers continue to make new netsuke today. Japan, Europe, and the United States all have active carvers. Women carvers are increasingly prominent. The International Netsuke Society supports the worldwide community. The tradition is alive and growing.

Why

'Dying' framings are often used to dismiss traditions outside dominant cultures.

Teaching this with care

Treat the netsuke tradition as serious art, not a curio or souvenir. Use 'netsuke' (singular and plural the same — netsuke can be plural). Pronounce 'netsuke' as 'NETS-keh' (not 'net-SOO-kee', which is a common English mispronunciation). Note that in British English the word is unitalicised; in American English it is usually italicised — this is a small but real difference in convention. Pronounce 'sagemono' as 'sah-geh-MOH-no'; 'inrō' as 'EEN-roh'; 'obi' as 'OH-bee'; 'kimono' as 'kee-MOH-no'; 'katabori' as 'kah-tah-BOH-ree'; 'Edo' as 'EH-doh'. Be honest about ivory. Many traditional netsuke used elephant ivory. Modern carvers avoid this. Major auction houses reject post-1947 elephant ivory. The tradition can be valued without endorsing modern ivory trade. Be careful with 'cute' framings. Netsuke can be charming — a sleeping cat, a smiling demon, a chubby Buddha. But the tradition is also serious craftsmanship, often with deep symbolic meaning. Avoid reducing netsuke to 'cute Japanese curiosities'. Be respectful of the cultural context. The Edo merchant class developed netsuke partly because of sumptuary laws. This is a real historical context. Avoid framing it as 'sneaky merchants getting around the law' — they were finding sophisticated forms of expression within real constraints. Be aware that some students may have netsuke or related objects in their families. Japanese diaspora communities sometimes preserve these traditions. Give space to share. Avoid the 'inscrutable Japanese craft' framing. Netsuke can be analysed, understood, and appreciated by anyone willing to learn. They are not mystical. They are detailed, deliberate, and skilled. Treat them with the same respect you would give to any other major craft tradition. End the lesson on the present. Master carvers are working today. New netsuke are being made. The tradition continues.

Check what students have understood

Answer each question in one or two sentences. Use what you have learned about the netsuke.

  1. What is a netsuke, and what was it used for?

    A netsuke is a Japanese miniature carved toggle, traditionally worn by men to hold a pouch (sagemono) onto the sash (obi) of a kimono. Japanese kimono had no pockets, so cords ran up from the pouch, over the sash, and were held in place by a netsuke at the top.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that explains both the object and its practical purpose.
  2. What materials were netsuke made from?

    Most commonly boxwood (which carves cleanly and is durable). Also ivory (elephant, hippopotamus, walrus, mammoth — modern carvers avoid elephant ivory). Other materials included lacquer, ceramic, metal, horn, bamboo root, and tagua nut. Each material gives different artistic effects.
    Marking note: Strong answers will name at least three materials, with boxwood as one of them.
  3. How did sumptuary laws shape the development of netsuke?

    Edo-period Japan had laws restricting what merchants could wear and display. Merchants were wealthy but officially below samurai in social status. Netsuke became a way to show refined taste and craftsmanship in a small, discreet object that did not break the rules. The constraints produced sophisticated miniature art.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that connects the legal restrictions to the development of the art form.
  4. Why was the netsuke tradition saved when Japan modernised?

    When Japan opened to the West and adopted Western clothing in the late 1800s, the kimono and netsuke fell out of daily use. But Western collectors discovered netsuke as art objects. Japanese carvers continued making them for export. The greatest collections ended up in Western museums. The tradition survived because it crossed from one market to another.
    Marking note: Strong answers will explain both the loss of practical use and the rise of the art market.
  5. Is the netsuke tradition alive today?

    Yes. Master carvers continue in Japan, Europe, and the United States. Women carvers have become more prominent. The International Netsuke Society (founded 1976) supports the worldwide community. Modern carvers use sustainable materials — boxwood, mammoth ivory, tagua nut — instead of elephant ivory. New netsuke are made and sold every year.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that recognises the tradition is alive and gives at least one specific detail.
Discuss together

These questions have no single right answer. Talk in pairs or small groups, then share your ideas with the class.

  1. The netsuke developed partly because Edo Japan had laws restricting what merchants could wear. What other examples do we know of constraints producing creative responses?

    Push students to think about constraint and creativity. They may suggest: prison art (people creating with limited materials), Japanese kintsugi (mending broken pottery with gold, in another lesson in this collection), African American spirituals (creativity under slavery), women's writing under male-dominated literary traditions (writing as men, anonymously, or in 'female' genres). The deeper point is that constraints often produce more interesting work than full freedom. The Russian Constructivists, the Bauhaus, and many other movements have similar stories. End by asking what current 'rules' might be producing creative responses students see in their own lives.
  2. Many traditional netsuke were made of elephant ivory. Should we celebrate, condemn, or just preserve these objects?

    This is a real ongoing debate. Arguments for preservation: the netsuke are valuable historical objects; destroying them helps no elephants; they teach about the past, including the past of ivory use. Arguments for restriction: even displaying old ivory may encourage new ivory demand; the past use of ivory was harmful; alternatives exist. Most museums and the Netsuke Society now take a middle path — preserve old netsuke, prohibit new elephant ivory netsuke. Strong answers will see this is contested. End by saying that thoughtful people disagree, and that 'preserve' and 'never use again' can coexist.
  3. A netsuke is 5 cm across, but a master carver might spend weeks on one. Why might small things sometimes deserve more attention than large things?

    This is a question about value and scale. Students may suggest: small things require precision; small things are personal and intimate; small things demand sustained attention from both maker and viewer; small things resist mass production. The deeper point is that 'big' is not the same as 'important'. Many of the world's most valuable objects are small — a wedding ring, a passport, a key, a piece of jewellery, a smartphone. Each holds enormous value despite small size. The netsuke is one of the world's clearest examples of small-scale mastery. End by asking students what small things they value, and why.
Teaching sequence
  1. THE HOOK (5 min)
    Without saying anything about the lesson, ask: 'How do you carry your wallet, your keys, your phone?' Take answers (most will say pockets). Then say: 'In Japan during the Edo period (1603-1868), men wore kimono. Kimono have no pockets. So they invented a clever solution. We are going to find out about it.'
  2. INTRODUCE THE OBJECT (10 min)
    Describe the netsuke: a small carved toggle, 3-5 cm across, attached to a cord that holds a pouch onto a kimono sash. Show the mother dog and pup image — explain that this took weeks to carve. Pause and ask: 'Why might Japanese craftsmen put so much skill into a tiny object?' Listen to answers.
  3. THE EDO CONTEXT (15 min)
    Tell the story: Edo period prosperity, sumptuary laws, merchants who couldn't show wealth openly, netsuke as a way to display refined taste in a small object. Discuss: how do constraints produce art? Connect to other examples — kintsugi (in another lesson), prison art, the elaborate hidden linings of merchant kimono.
  4. THE TRADITION TODAY (10 min)
    Tell the modernisation story: Perry arrives 1853, Meiji period 1868, kimono fading, Western collectors saving the tradition, modern master carvers continuing the craft. Discuss the ivory question — old netsuke preserved, new netsuke made of sustainable materials. The tradition is alive.
  5. CLOSING (5 min)
    Ask: 'What does the netsuke teach us about beauty, constraint, and small things?' Take a few honest answers. End by saying: 'Right now, in workshops in Tokyo, Kyoto, and other cities, master carvers are working on new netsuke. Each one will take weeks. Each one will be smaller than your hand. The art that started as a way to attach a pouch to a sash has become one of the world's most refined miniature traditions. The smallest objects often hold the largest worlds. Now you know.'
Classroom materials
Design Your Own Netsuke
Instructions: Each student designs a personal netsuke on paper. They must choose: (1) a subject (animal, object, mythological figure, scene); (2) a size constraint (must fit in 3-5 cm); (3) a meaning (something the netsuke represents about them). Display the designs. Discuss: real netsuke worked the same way — small object, personal meaning, refined craft.
Example: In Mr Yamamoto's class, students designed netsuke representing their pets, their hobbies, and their family heritage. The teacher said: 'You have just done what Japanese craftsmen did for over 200 years. You started with something meaningful, then thought about how to make it beautiful in a small space. The constraint of size forced you to choose carefully. Real netsuke carvers worked the same way. Some of the world's most beautiful art comes from these constraints.'
The 5cm Test
Instructions: Show students a ruler. Have each student measure 5 cm with their fingers. Then ask them to imagine carving a recognisable animal or person at that size. Discuss: at 5 cm, every detail matters. A slightly off curve is visible. A misplaced eye ruins the face. Compare with sculpture at 50 cm or 5 m, where small errors are less visible. Skill works differently at different scales.
Example: In Mrs Tanaka's class, students were surprised at how small 5 cm felt when they thought about carving. The teacher said: 'You have just discovered why netsuke take weeks to make. At this size, every cut shows. The carver cannot be sloppy. Compare with painting on a large canvas, where you can fix mistakes. Carving at this scale is unforgiving. The mastery is real. The patience is real.'
Cultures Under Constraint
Instructions: In small groups, students discuss: 'What other art forms have developed because of constraints?' Examples might include: kintsugi (broken pottery mended with gold, in another lesson in this collection), Russian Orthodox icons (developed under religious restrictions on imagery), Islamic geometric patterns (developed where figurative art was discouraged), European illuminated manuscripts (developed in monasteries with strict rules). Each group shares one example. Discuss: constraint and creativity often go together.
Example: In one class, students named: kintsugi, hip-hop (developed in poverty with limited equipment), African American spirituals (created under slavery), women's writing under male-dominated traditions, traditional African rhythms (preserved across the slave trade). The teacher said: 'You have just listed real cases where restriction produced something beautiful. The netsuke is one of many. Constraint is often the mother of creativity. The full freedom that we sometimes idealise can produce less interesting work than carefully chosen limits.'
Where to go next
  • Try a lesson on the kintsugi bowl for another Japanese craft tradition that turns constraint into beauty.
  • Try a lesson on the Korean celadon for another East Asian craft of supreme refinement.
  • Try a lesson on the matryoshka for another miniature tradition with a complex history.
  • Connect this lesson to history class with a longer project on Edo Japan. The period produced kabuki, ukiyo-e prints, sushi, sumo, and many other traditions still alive today.
  • Connect this lesson to art class with a longer project on miniature traditions worldwide. Persian miniatures, Indian Mughal painting, European illuminated manuscripts, Russian Faberge eggs, and netsuke each developed their own approaches.
  • Connect this lesson to citizenship class with a longer discussion of sumptuary laws and how they affect culture. Modern equivalents include school uniforms, work dress codes, and various forms of regulated display.
Key takeaways
  • A netsuke is a Japanese miniature carved toggle, traditionally used to hold a pouch (sagemono) onto a kimono sash. The kimono had no pockets, so men used cords to hang containers from their sashes, with a netsuke at the top to keep the cord in place.
  • Most netsuke are 3-5 cm across, but contain extraordinary detail. Master carvers spent weeks on individual pieces, working in boxwood, ivory, and other materials, with subjects covering the full range of Japanese imagination — animals, gods, demons, daily life, mythological figures.
  • Netsuke developed partly because of sumptuary laws in Edo Japan (1603-1868). Merchants could not openly display wealth, so they put their craftsmanship into small objects. The constraint produced one of the world's most refined miniature art forms.
  • When Japan modernised during the Meiji period (1868-1912), kimono use declined and the netsuke's practical purpose disappeared. The tradition was saved by Western collectors who recognised the artistic value. Major collections now exist in museums worldwide — the Victoria and Albert in London, the Walters in Baltimore, the Metropolitan in New York, and many others.
  • The tradition is alive today. Master carvers in Japan, Europe, and the United States continue to make new netsuke. Women carvers like Asuka Kajiura play increasing roles. The International Netsuke Society (founded 1976) supports the worldwide community.
  • Materials today emphasise sustainable choices: boxwood, mammoth ivory (from extinct mammoths), hippopotamus tusk legally sourced, tagua nut. Major auction houses reject elephant ivory netsuke made after 1947, when international ivory restrictions began.
Sources
  • Netsuke: The Japanese Art of Miniature Carving — Matthew Welch and Sharen Chappell (1999) [academic]
  • The Hare with Amber Eyes: A Family's Century of Art and Loss — Edmund de Waal (2010) [academic]
  • Netsuke: 100 Miniature Masterpieces from Japan — Noriko Tsuchiya (2014) [academic]
  • International Netsuke Society Journal — International Netsuke Society (2024) [institution]
  • Netsuke Collection — Victoria and Albert Museum (2024) [institution]