For over twelve centuries, Japanese artisans have perfected an art form so refined, so impossibly patient, that a single finished object can take longer to make than most people spend on an entire creative project. That art is Maki-e — and it is about to arrive on a Wancher watch dial near you.

Before we announce what's coming, we want you to understand what it truly is. Not the surface-level definition, but the full weight of it — the history, the technique, the human devotion it demands. Because once you understand Maki-e, the watch means something different entirely.
The Word Itself: 蒔絵
蒔Maki-e is written with two kanji: 蒔 (maki), meaning "to sprinkle" or "to sow," and 絵 (e), meaning "picture" or "painting." Sprinkled picture. The name is the technique: a design is drawn in wet lacquer, then fine gold or silver powder is immediately dusted — sown — onto the surface before it can dry.
What sounds simple is anything but. The brush used to draw the design may have only three to five hairs. The lacquer window — the time between application and setting — can be as short as a few minutes in warm weather. The artisan must be precise, fast, and completely calm. There is no erasing in lacquerwork. Every stroke is permanent.
The tradition dates to the Nara period (710–794 AD), when Japan's craftspeople began experimenting with urushi — the raw sap of the Toxicodendron vernicifluum tree — as a medium for decorative art. By the Heian period, Maki-e had become the luxury material of the imperial court. By the Edo era (1603–1868), it was the defining aesthetic of Japan's warrior class, applied to sword fittings, lacquer boxes, furniture, and personal effects of extraordinary complexity and beauty.
The Japanese do not separate craft from art. A lacquer watch made by a master is not decorative — it is a painting that happens to hold something.
Urushi: The Living Material
To understand Maki-e, you must first understand urushi. It is not paint. It is not varnish in any Western sense. Urushi is tree sap — raw, caustic, and intensely alive. Untreated, it causes severe allergic reactions in most people on first contact, similar to poison ivy (they are botanical relatives). The craftspeople who work with it for decades develop a tolerance, but the early years of an apprenticeship are marked by swollen, itching hands.
Once refined and cured, urushi becomes one of the most durable natural materials humans have ever worked with. Archaeological samples of urushi lacquerware have been recovered in near-perfect condition after 9,000 years. It is waterproof, heat-resistant, and possesses a depth and luminosity that no synthetic coating has ever replicated. Light does not simply reflect off urushi — it enters the surface, travels through multiple transparent layers, and returns with a warmth and dimension that seems almost liquid.

This is the foundation of every Maki-e object. The lacquer is not decoration on the object — it is the object.

Did you know? Japan designates its finest urushi lacquer craftspeople as "Living National Treasures" (人間国宝, Ningen Kokuhō) — the same cultural honour given to the country's greatest musicians, kabuki actors, and ceramic masters.
The Four Techniques of Maki-e
Maki-e is not a single technique but a family of related methods, each with its own visual character and level of complexity. Mastering even one takes years. Masters of all four are extraordinarily rare.



Why It Cannot Be Rushed
There is a reason Maki-e objects cost what they cost, and it has nothing to do with materials. Gold powder is relatively inexpensive. The urushi itself, while precious, is not the price driver. What you are paying for — what has no substitute — is time.

Urushi cures through a process called urushi-nuri, which requires specific humidity and temperature conditions. In Japan, lacquerware is cured in a wooden cabinet called a furo (風呂), maintained at 75–85% relative humidity. Each layer must cure completely — typically 24 to 72 hours — before the next can be applied. A single object may receive 40, 60, or even 100 individual lacquer applications before it is finished.
An apprentice Maki-e artist trains for a minimum of five years before being permitted to work on finished objects. A master's apprenticeship routinely extends to fifteen or twenty years. The knowledge is passed person to person, touch to touch, in ateliers where the senior craftsperson may not speak — where learning happens by watching, attempting, and absorbing over seasons and years.
UNESCO recognised urushi craft as an Intangible Cultural Heritage in 2015. This recognition came partly because the craft is endangered — fewer people each generation are willing to commit to the decade-long apprenticeship its mastery demands.

The furo does not hurry. The urushi does not hurry. The apprentice who tries to hurry produces nothing worth keeping. This is the first lesson, and it takes years to truly learn
Our Maki-e on a Watch Dial: Designed to Be Enjoyed!
Traditional Maki-e watches are exceptionally difficult to produce, and those that exist typically come from a handful of Japanese manufacturers, such as Namiki, Sailor, Platinum and etc who have spent decades cultivating relationships with lacquer ateliers — or who employ artisans in-house at enormous cost, starting from $10,000 and up!
Hence, what Wancher Watch has achieved is a partnership with an Ishikawa-based Maki-e studio that has agreed to create an affordable Urushi Maki-e Watch that everyone can enjoy by employing modern silk printing Kindai Maki-e technique on top of an already lacquered urushi dial.

Continue the Series
- Part 1 — What is Maki-e? (You are here)
- Part 2 — Kindai Maki-e vs Traditional Maki-e Explained
