Pottery📍 Kyoto

京都陶艺体验——在辘轳上做清水烧、英语友好(还能寄回家)

在清水烧的故乡亲手拉坯,做一只属于自己的器物——京都英语友好陶艺体验约 ¥2,900 起,烧成后可寄送到你的国家。

京都河井宽次郎纪念馆工作间里的辘轳
Nicholas & Debra Jewell · CC BY 2.0

At a glance

The honest go-info
Language
English-friendly — hosted or guided in English
Duration
辘轳体验 25–90 分钟;烧成的作品约 1.5–2.5 个月后寄达
Price
25 分钟辘轳体验约 ¥2,900 起(截至 2026 年 7 月);较长方案 ¥5,500–¥6,900;烧制与海外运费另计
Booking
Reserve in advance — walk-ins are not guaranteed
Nearest station
清水道巴士站(市巴士100/206/207);朝日烧近京阪宇治站
What to wear
穿不怕沾泥的衣服;袖子卷到肘上,摘下戒指与手表。指甲剪短会让拉坯容易得多。围裙情况请在预约时确认。
Good for
初次体验者, 情侣与家庭, 想带回真正纪念品的旅行者

The way · 道

  1. Arrive清水道巴士站(市巴士100/206/207);朝日烧近京阪宇治站
  2. EtiquetteA few quiet manners go a long way — read the form first
  3. DoPottery
  4. BookReserve your slot below

The short answer

Kyoto is the best city in Japan to try the potter's wheel. The city's own ceramic tradition — Kiyomizu ware (Kiyomizu-yaki, part of the Kyo-yaki family) — grew up on the kiln-lined slopes below Kiyomizu-dera, and studios in that same neighbourhood now run beginner-friendly wheel-throwing classes with English support. A short session starts from about ¥2,900 (as of July 2026), a relaxed 55-minute plan is about ¥6,900, and a private 90-minute lesson with one of Kyoto's famous pottery families runs about ¥53,525. Book online in advance — the Kiyomizu studios are on every sightseeing route.

The one thing nobody tells you before you go: you can't carry your pot home the same day. After you leave, it still has to be trimmed, glazed and fired — but the studios below handle all of that and ship finished pieces overseas, so your bowl lands on your doorstep about 1.5–2.5 months after your holiday. A souvenir that arrives just as the post-trip blues set in is a genuinely good system.

What actually happens, step by step

  1. Reserve a plan online. Wheel classes near Kiyomizu-dera get busy in cherry-blossom and autumn seasons, so book at least a few days ahead — Asahiyaki in Uji recommends about a month.
  2. A short demonstration. The instructor centres a lump of clay on the spinning wheel and shows you the three moves: steady the clay, open the middle, lift the wall.
  3. You throw. With wet clay under your palms and the wheel humming, the instructor guides your hands — at the English-supported studios, in English. Most beginners get a respectable bowl or cup within minutes, and several plans let you make more than one piece and pick your favourite for firing.
  4. Choose the finish. You pick the glaze colour from samples, decide which piece to fire, and write down your delivery address.
  5. The studio takes over. Over the following weeks the artisans trim the foot, glaze and fire your piece, then pack it and send it off.

The feeling itself is the point: clay is alive, the wheel is quick, and the difference between a bowl and a collapsed pancake is about three seconds of overconfidence. The instructors are used to this — nobody leaves without something worth firing.

Which studio? An honest comparison

StudioEnglishPriceDurationAreaVibe
Zuikou — Kiyomizu studioEnglish lessons at the Kiyomizu-dera studioLight ¥2,900 / Standard ¥3,900 / Zuikou plan ¥6,90025–55 minBeside Yasaka Pagoda, HigashiyamaPolished, efficient, built for travellers
Kawai Kobo (private, via Wabunka)English-speaking guide includedFrom ¥53,52590 minGojozaka, HigashiyamaIntimate masterclass in a mingei-lineage workshop
Asahiyaki Pottery ClassEnglish pamphlets & signageElectric wheel ¥5,5001–1.5 hoursUji, ~7 min from Keihan Uji StationCalm tea-ware kiln, working since 1600

Zuikou (瑞光窯) is the easy first choice for most travellers. Its Kiyomizu studio sits beside the Yasaka Pagoda, a few minutes from Kiyomizu-dera (bus 100/206/207 to Kiyomizu-michi), and it's the location that offers lessons in English — the separate Higashiyama workshop teaches in Japanese only, so pick the right one when booking. Plans scale neatly: a 25-minute Light session from ¥2,900, a Standard at ¥3,900, and the 55-minute Zuikou plan at ¥6,900 for more time at the wheel. Reserve on the official site.

Kawai Kobo is the opposite end of the scale: a private 90-minute session in a Gojozaka workshop founded by Takeichi Kawai, nephew of Kanjirō Kawai — one of the towering figures of Japan's mingei folk-craft movement — and now led by third-generation head Akiteru Kawai. It costs from about ¥53,525 per person with an English-speaking guide included, booked through Wabunka. If you want craft heritage rather than a quick souvenir stop, this is the one. (Kanjirō's own house, wheels and climbing kiln survive nearby as a small museum — the photo above shows his workshop.)

Asahiyaki is the quiet connoisseur's option, out in Uji — about 7 minutes on foot from Keihan Uji Station. The kiln has made tea ware by the Uji River since 1600, and its pottery class offers an electric wheel experience from ¥5,500 (1–1.5 hours), plus hand-building (¥4,950) and painting (¥4,400) courses. English pamphlets and signage are available; it's closed Mondays, and reservations are recommended about a month ahead on the official page.

Shipping your fired piece overseas — how it really works

This is the question travellers ask most, so here it is plainly:

  • Zuikou ships internationally, with delivery in about 7–10 weeks. Fees depend on region and number of pieces — roughly ¥3,900–¥7,900 to Asia, ¥3,900–¥9,900 to Europe/Oceania, ¥4,900–¥12,000 to North America — and customs duties may apply on arrival.
  • Asahiyaki finishes and fires your piece in about two months, with overseas shipping available via EMS.
  • Kawai Kobo glazes and fires your work after the session and ships it to you afterwards; confirm international delivery for your country when booking through Wabunka.

Two practical tips: give an address that will still be yours in three months (moving soon? use a friend's), and factor the shipping fee into your comparison — a ¥2,900 class plus overseas postage is still cheaper than most things you could buy on the souvenir streets below Kiyomizu-dera.

Etiquette and what to wear

A pottery class is one of Kyoto's most relaxed cultural experiences, but a few habits help. Arrive a few minutes early; the wheel time is tightly scheduled. Wear clothes you don't mind getting clay on, roll your sleeves above the elbow, and take off rings and watches — short nails make everything easier. Most importantly, follow the instructor's hands rather than pushing your own ideas into the clay: the wheel rewards a light, patient touch, and 'perfect' isn't the goal. A slightly wonky bowl you made yourself is exactly the kind of imperfect beauty Japan celebrates — if that idea appeals, read what wabi-sabi means.

Who it's good for

First-timers, couples and families (studios run short, forgiving plans), and anyone who wants a souvenir with a story instead of another shopping bag. It pairs naturally with the quieter side of Kyoto: a tea ceremony uses exactly the kind of bowls you just made, and our guide to Kyoto's best cultural experiences helps you build the rest of the day. And if your bowl ever breaks years from now, there's a Japanese answer for that too — a kintsugi class teaches you to mend it with gold.

Choosing Asahiyaki? Uji is Japan's green-tea heartland — make a half-day of it with a matcha lunch; our sister food site UMAMI HUNT covers where to eat.

亮点

  • 在清水烧的故乡用辘轳做一只碗或杯
  • 距清水寺步行片刻、支持英语的课程
  • 作品经上釉、烧制后寄出——支持海外配送
  • 约 ¥2,900 起的短时方案可穿插在观光行程中

实用须知

你负责成形,收尾交给匠人——修坯、上釉、烧制由工房事后完成,成品颜色与样品略有差异是工艺的韵味而非失误。作品当天带不走(烧制需数周),请以寄送为前提。提前几分钟到场,指甲剪短,跟着老师的手势来——辘轳靠的是轻柔的触感,不是蛮力。

The MICHI Desk
  • Japanese-culture experience editor

Verified, English-friendly guides to experiencing Japanese culture.

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