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Craft Fair Matsumoto
Making things, celebrated by a whole town. In Matsumoto, Nagano, at Agata-no-Mori Park, on…
Making things, celebrated by a whole town. In Matsumoto, Nagano, at Agata-no-Mori Park, on the last weekend of May, Craft Fair Matsumoto is held. Some three hundred selected makers gather from across the country, with woodwork, ceramics, glass, dyeing and weaving, metalwork, leather, all of it handmade. It began in 1985, a pioneer of Japan's craft fairs, and inspired craft markets across the country. Matsumoto has long been a town of folk craft, deeply tied to Soetsu Yanagi's mingei movement, a place that seeks beauty in the things of daily use. Amid fresh greenery, makers' tents line the lawn, and customers pick up bowls and chairs to examine them. These are not mass-produced goods, but things someone made over time. Little by little, you choose your life with your own hands. Matsumoto is also a popular place to relocate to. One of Nagano's defining craft events.
Matsumoto Jidai Matsuri: Four Centuries of Castle Town History Walking
Matsumoto Castle's keep is black — unusual in Japanese castle architecture, which more com…
Matsumoto Castle's keep is black — unusual in Japanese castle architecture, which more commonly tends toward white — and the darkness makes it imposing in a way that white castles are not. The keep is original, one of the few that survived intact from the Sengoku period, and its age is visible in the wood and the proportions. Standing in the castle courtyard in October, with the Japanese Alps visible behind the hills to the west, produces one of the more complete castle experiences available in Japan.
The Jidai Matsuri adds a historical procession to this already significant setting: people in period costumes from the Sengoku era to the Meiji period moving through the castle grounds and the surrounding streets. The span of four centuries in a single procession means the visual range is wide — samurai armor followed by Edo-period merchants followed by Meiji-era officials — and the black castle provides a consistent backdrop across all of them.
Matsumoto is a city worth spending two or three days in. The castle is the anchor, but the surrounding craft beer culture, the classical music festival, and the proximity of the Japan Alps and Kamikochi extend the possibilities considerably. The October festival adds a specific date to what is otherwise an open invitation.
Water rises from the ground here — at the source called 源智の井戸, a spring in the middle of the old castle town, people still fill bottles in the ordinary course of a morning errand. That detail orients you quickly in Matsumoto: the historical and the habitual are not separated. The black-walled keep of 松本城 stands above the moat not as a relic but as a fixed point in the daily skyline, the thing you navigate by when the streets shift direction.
The streets themselves carry distinct weight. Along 中町商店街 and 縄手通り, the preserved townscape holds craft shops and small galleries — not as a museum district but as working retail. 松本民芸家具, the regional furniture tradition rooted in folk-craft principles, still has a presence here, its plain-grained wood and honest joinery the opposite of souvenir aesthetics. In late summer, the Seiji Ozawa Matsumoto Festival draws international musicians into the city's concert halls, and the sound of rehearsals drifts into the surrounding streets in a way that feels less like tourism and more like a long-standing argument the city has with itself about what culture is for.
Beyond the city grid, the terrain asserts itself. The 北アルプス — the peaks of the Hida range, including 奥穂高岳 — frame the western horizon with a flatness that the eye keeps returning to. 白骨温泉 sits further into those mountains, reached by winding road, its milky water a contrast to the urban order below. Back in town, a plate of 山賊焼き — thick-cut chicken, garlicky and pressed flat — eaten at a counter somewhere near the station, closes the distance between landscape and table in the way that regional food sometimes does, without ceremony.
Stay in Matsumoto, Nagano
What converges here
- Matsumoto Castle Tower
- Matsumoto Castle Tower
- Matsumoto Castle Keep
- Matsumoto Castle Tower
- Matsumoto Castle Tower
- Former Kaichi School Building
- Kamikochi
- Shirahone Onsen Funtokyu and Spherical Limestone
- Ogasawara Clan Castle Ruins (Igawa Castle Ruins, Hayashi Castle Ruins)
- Koboyama Tumulus
- Matsumoto Castle
- Omiya Atsuta Shrine Wakamiya Hachimangu Main Hall
- Chikuma-jinja Shrine Main Hall
- Omiya Atsuta Shrine Main Hall
- Tamurando
- Wakamiya Hachimansha Honden
- Baba Family Residence (Uchida, Matsumoto City, Nagano Prefecture)
- Baba Family Residence (Uchida, Matsumoto, Nagano)
- Baba Family Residence (Matsumoto City, Nagano Prefecture)
- Baba Family Residence (Uchida, Matsumoto, Nagano)
- Baba Family Residence (Matsumoto City, Nagano Prefecture)
- Baba Family Residence (Uchida, Matsumoto, Nagano)
- Former Matsumoto Ward Court Building
- Former Matsumoto High School
- Former Matsumoto High School
- Ushifusegawa Main Channel (Ushifusegawa Stepped Waterway)
- Chubusangaku
- Yatsugatake-Chushin Kogen
- Norikura Kogen Onsen
- Shirahone Onsen
- Nakajo Onsen
- Utsukushigahara Onsen
- Mount Okuhotaka
- Mount Karasawa
- Mount Obami
- Mount Maehotaka
- Mount Jonen
- Mount Nishi
- Mount Chogatake
- Mount Akasawa
- Mount Kasumizawa
- Mount Otaki
- Mount Jukkoku
- Mount Yake
- Mount Utsukushigahara
- Matsumoto
- Matsumoto
- Matsumoto
- Murai
- Minami-Matsumoto
- Hirata
- Kitashin-Matsumoto Daigaku-mae
- Kita-Matsumoto
- Hata
- Shin-Shimashima
- Moriguchi
- Mimitsu
- Shimojima
- Oba
- Shinmura
- Nagisa
- Shimoshin
- Nishi-Matsumoto
- Shinano-Arai
- Fuchihigashi
- Shimanai
- Shima-Takamatsu
- Matsumoto Airport