In Japan, the wrapping of a package is truly an art, as this classic study of the craft of Japanese packaging so beautifully shows. The traditional Japanese packaging materials, as depicted
here in the more than two hundred black-and-white photographs, are supremely simple—mostly bamboo, rice straw, hemp twine, paper, or leaves. But these ordinary natural materials are transformed
by the artist into containers, boxes, baskets, and wrappers that are practical, imaginative, surprising, and sometimes breathtakingly beautiful.This book was hugely popular on its first
publication in 1967 at a time when interest in the Japanese aesthetic was new and readers were newly charmed and delighted by the notion of packaging as art. But it is perhaps even more
relevant now, in our age of iPods, bubble wrap, and ziplock bags. We’ve gone even further toward losing the connection to nature and the humanity that is expressed in the Japanese art of
packaging and that makes the images in this book so wonderful. As the author says: “Traditional Japanese packaging is nothing less than a manifestation of the Japanese love of spiritual things,
a love that we, and people everywhere in this modern world, must make haste to reclaim unless it is to vanish forever.”