Miyake, Nara
Leather cut and stitched into baseball gloves — that is one of the first things you learn about Miyake-cho, a town in Nara Prefecture so compact that walking its length takes less time than most people expect. The Kintetsu Kashihara Line stops at Ishimi Station; the Tawaramoto Line stops at Tajima. Between those two small stations, the town holds its ground quietly, flat land shaped by the Asuka and Soga rivers running close on either side.
The soil here has been settled for a long time. The Miyake Kofun Group and Hyotanyama Kofun mark the earth with the presence of an earlier political center, and Taishi-do — the road associated with Prince Shotoku — crosses the area still. At Hakusan Shrine in the Byobu district, a stone said to have been used as a resting seat by Shotoku stands in the compound, the kind of object that accumulates no ceremony but simply remains. Across from it, Byobu Kizuki Shrine faces the street without fanfare.
The Zenkoku Orizuru Senshuken Taikai — a national paper crane folding competition — is held here, which says something about the town's scale and the particular texture of its civic life: small enough that a paper crane championship fills a hall and means something local. The leather industry and the folded paper coexist without irony, two kinds of precision work in a place that has always asked its residents to be careful with their hands.