Guides
Des guides écrits par notre rédaction — le chemin le plus rapide.
A clear, first-timer-friendly explainer of the Japanese tea ceremony (chanoyu) — what it is, its Zen roots and Sen no Rikyu, the four principles wa-kei-sei-jaku, what actually happens, and thick vs thin matcha — with where to experience it yourself.
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Yes for most first-timers: for the price of a couple of museum tickets you get a full kimono, professional dressing, and a few unforgettable hours photographing the old streets of Kyoto's Higashiyama or Tokyo's Asakusa. Here is the honest case for and against, what you really get for the money, who should skip it, and how to make sure it is worth every yen.
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A clear, first-timer's explainer of geisha vs maiko: who is the apprentice, how to tell them apart at a glance, why they are artists (not prostitutes), where to see them in Kyoto, and how to ethically book a maiko experience.
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Une explication claire du wabi-sabi — l'esthétique japonaise de l'imperfection, de l'impermanence et de la simplicité paisible — avec des exemples concrets et les lieux où le ressentir soi-même.
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Une sélection honnête, pensée pour les nouveaux venus, d'expériences culturelles réservables à Kyoto — cérémonie du thé, kimono, zazen, calligraphie et plus — avec comment choisir et ce que chacune vaut vraiment.
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Un guide clair pour débutants sur l'étiquette de la cérémonie du thé japonaise : comment entrer, recevoir le bol, boire et déguster la confiserie — sans connaître le japonais.
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A clear, step-by-step guide to putting on a yukata yourself — the correct left-over-right wrap, tying the obi, fixing a loose collar, and the one mistake to avoid.
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Yes, you can enjoy a Japanese onsen with tattoos — here's how: tattoo-friendly baths, cover-up patches, and private (kashikiri) baths, plus the etiquette that actually matters.
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