Real urushi lacquerware is tougher than it looks and fussier than people fear. The short version: hand-wash it, dry it at once, keep it out of the dishwasher, microwave, and direct sun, and use it often. Here is the full owner's guide — what actually damages lacquer, why, how to clean it, and why a well-used piece looks better in ten years than it did new.
Wajima-nuri is the lacquerware built to survive. Made in a small port on Japan's Noto Peninsula through a process commonly counted at 124 steps, its toughness comes from a local diatomaceous powder and from cloth glued over every weak edge. Here is how it is built, why the labor is split among dozens of hands, and what the 2024 Noto earthquake did to the craft.
Urushi is the sap of a single Asian tree, and the strangest thing about it is how it sets: not by drying, but by absorbing moisture from damp air. Here is the chemistry behind Japan's living lacquer, why a cup of it takes a tree's lifetime, and what makes the cured film so tough.