Starting at 11am, Japanese tea specialists from Tencha will offer Japanese tea tastings, with teas available to buy afterwards. This is a rare opportunity to taste Shincha, Japan's first flush green tea from the first harvest of 2024!
In the afternoon (2pm), Mutsumi Niwa, wagashi artist from Sakura Junction, will be offering 30-minute wagashi-making classes for £15 as an optional extra to the ticket price. She will also be selling beautiful handmade Japanese sweets.
Sarah Stewart, Urasenke chado (the Way of Tea) teacher and practitioner will also be offering Japanese tea ceremony demonstrations, and Sonoe Sugawara, vintage kimono expert, is opening her vintage kimono shop, Furuki Yo-Kimono Vintage, for people to try and buy on the day.
The author herself, Japanologist and seasonality expert Natalie Leon, will also give a talk about her wonderful new book and will be available to sign copies and meet and greet guests throughout the day.
ABOUT THE BOOK
Since the Heian period, nature has permeated every aspect of Japanese culture in myriad ways; the Japanese literally eat, sleep and wear the seasons, from kimono motifs to seasonal sweets and annual festivals dedicated to the moon's beauty or the blooming of flowers. This celebration of nature leads to a deep awareness of the seasons, called kisetsukan.
In The Japanese Art of Living Seasonally, Japanologist and seasonality expert Natalie Leon explains the hidden depths of kisetsukan and shares how seasonal living can be incorporated into our own lives. Through 12 key concepts, such as shun, focusing on eating seasonally, Kasane, the language of colour, and mottainai, zero-waste living, this treasure trove of folktales, recipes and activities is an invitation to mark and appreciate each passing season:
— Design your own beautiful New Year's cards, make a snow rabbit, and watch out for the first plum blossoms of the year during Oshogatsu (New Year).
— Practise hanami, the ritual of flower viewing, and celebrate spring blossoming trees around the world. Make edible dried petals for sweets or compose a haiku to celebrate the ephemeral beauty of spring.
— Discover the way of the water, or mizu, through Japanese river spirits and ocean goddesses. Try spring rain rituals or take an onsen-inspired bath in the winter.
— Experience the seasons through your local trees by trying shinrin yoku, the self-care practice of forest bathing. Learn unique Japanese tree-related words, including komorebi, which refers to the rays of light that filter down through leaves.
General Admission: £5.00
General Admission + Book: £12.00
VIP admission (Inc. book & wagashi workshop entry): £27.00