
Iconic Shikoku ‘Anpanman' Trains Mark 25th Anniversary
In the Shikoku region, the main mode of transportation is cars, but the company has operated the special train service for a quarter century in the hope that children will experience the joy of traveling by trains.
The trains have carried a total of about 1.15 million passengers so far and have come to represent the Shikoku region.
A JR Shikoku official said, 'We express our gratitude to people who love [the Anpanman trains] and we want to continue operating them.'
Free rides for children
The idea for the Anpanman trains was devised partly because Takashi Yanase, the creator of Anpanman, was from Kochi.
In October 2000, the first Anpanman train began service as one of the Nampu limited express trains between Kochi and Okayama.
According to the company, the train, which was entirely wrapped with pictures of the characters and was operated without a set ending date, was unusual in those days.
In 2001, the routes of the Anpanman train service were expanded to sections between Okayama and Matsuyama, and Takamatsu and Matsuyama.
New models of Anpanman train cars debuted one after another. They include the YuYu Anpanman Car with play spaces for children, which debuted in 2002; those with reserved seats, called Anpanman Seats, on which pictures of the characters are printed, which debuted in 2005; and the Seto-Ohashi Anpanman Torokko, which has no glass in its windows and debuted in 2006.
In 2012, Anpanman trains ran in Miyagi, Iwate and Fukushima prefectures following the devastation of the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake. Children in the damaged areas were invited to ride the trains free of charge.
In 2023, the total number of passengers on the Anpanman trains reached 1 million. As of the end of March this year, the total number had risen to about 1.147 million.
In recent years, a sizable number of people from Taiwan and other places overseas, where the anime series can be viewed online, have come to the region to ride the trains.
Long-term plan
In 2000, when the first Anpanman train began service, cars dominated transport in the Shikoku region, partly because of the opening of all sections of the expressways that connect the four prefectural capital cities in the Shikoku region in an X-shaped route.
Toshiyuki Umehara, 86, who was then president of JR Shikoku, said that what prompted the start of the Anpanman train service was an opinion poll the company conducted, mainly surveying people on shopping streets in Kochi Prefecture.
Regarding how people traveled to Osaka, most of the respondents replied that they used planes. About limited express trains, they replied that 'fares are higher than for planes' and 'the number of trains is too small.'
Umehara said: 'Actually, the fares were not so high and the number of trains was large. They had the wrong impression because they had not ridden on our trains.'
As he thought, he realized that he wanted people to experience train travel during their childhood and adopted an idea presented by a young employee. Umehara decided to begin limited express Anpanman train services.
Umehara recalled his thoughts at the time, saying: 'Children who have ridden in Anpanman trains will surely use trains when they become adults. It was a plan on which more than 20 years would be spent.'
Kiyohiro Matsuda, 78, who was then chief of JR Shikoku's train business department and later became president of the company, made the utmost effort to realize the plan. Other company officials voiced doubts such as, 'Babies and infants ride free of charge, so can it really result in a revenue increase?'
Despite such worries, Umehara and Matsuda made the decision to introduce the Anpanman trains. The result, Matsuda said, was 'a joyful miscalculation.'
Little children rode the trains with their parents, grandparents and other adults, but the number of adults was larger than they had predicted.
When services along parts of the company's Dosan Line were suspended for about three months in 1998 due to damage from a torrential rain disaster, Anpanman trains played a role in revitalizing the affected communities after the line was restored.
Future generations
Twenty-five years since the trains debuted, people who grew up with them now shoulder the business operations of JR Shikoku.
Sota Miyoshi, 26, who works in the company's office for the promotion of Anpanman train businesses, has worked as a conductor on Anpanman trains since joining the company in 2021.
'The image of children waving their hands for a long time even after disembarking is imprinted on my mind,' he said.
These memories of children overlap with his own as he also waved at Anpanman trains running along the rail tracks in Shikokuchuo, Ehime Prefecture, where he lived as a small child.
This fiscal year, JR Shikoku is operating a train with a reproduction of the exterior of the very first Anpanman train. The train will run until Jan. 12 next year between Kochi Station and Tosa Kuroshio Tetsudo Co.'s Nakamura or Sukumo stations.
A JR Shikoku official said: 'This is a milestone year when we express our gratitude to the many people who have loved [Anpanman trains]. We want to offer a wide range of related services.'
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Tokyo Weekender
27-06-2025
- Tokyo Weekender
Sashiko Gals: The Touching Story Behind Japan's Most Unexpected Fashion Icons
A series of thick, stitched trails run across the ordinary suede of a New Balance sneaker like wandering footprints on a map, tracing and veering away from the shoe's original contours. Beneath them, scattered across the shoe's surface, is a web of indigo-dyed patches. The design is unpolished yet artful and distinctly joyful, turning the iconic shoe into something truly original. This is a classic Sashiko Gals design. The collective specializes in the traditional Japanese needlework technique of sashiko , which uses bold running stitches for reparative and decorative purposes. The women of the collective offer a bespoke customization service: For prices starting at around $1,600 USD, they will painstakingly embroider a pair of sneakers, provided by the customer — a process that takes an experienced artisan about 30 hours of work. The design is left to the gals' discretion, and the service is currently so popular that prospective clients have to apply via a lottery system. The collective is perhaps best known for its highly coveted limited-release collaborations with legendary brands: Veja, Maison Margiela and Isetan Men's, to name a few. Given Sashiko Gals' fashion bonafides and cult following, one might expect its members to be insiders or formally trained designers — but in fact, it's a group of 15 women between their 40s and 80s based in Otsuchi, a sleepy seaside town in Iwate Prefecture. The first iteration of the project that would eventually become Sashiko Gals began in 2011, the year of the Great East Japan Earthquake. Its initial members had lost their homes and jobs in the ensuing devastation, and several were living in evacuation centers. For them, sashiko was a means of recovery: stitching a future while honoring the past. List of Contents: A Community in Tatters The Spirit of Girlhood From Otsuchi to the World Related Posts A Community in Tatters As one of the areas that suffered extensive damage following the earthquake and tsunami, Otsuchi underwent a long period of reconstruction. Sashiko Gals' original name was the Otsuchi Recovery Sashiko Project, brought to life by women who were unable to help with rebuilding efforts that involved heavy lifting. Wanting to do something productive to fill their days, they began stitching. Keeping busy with sashiko became their lifeline. 'At the time of the disaster, it may have been a way to create a sense of purpose in life,' Arata Fujiwara, a longtime collaborator and the current business manager of the project, told Tokyo Weekender . 'When they were facing many hardships, focusing on a hands-on craft every day allowed them — if only temporarily — to put everything else aside.' Tokyo-based media outlet Houyhnhnm recently produced a short documentary on the Sashiko Gals members, in which they all recount their stories. In it, Mieko Osawa, 74, recalls the shock and devastation of March 11. Though she and her husband were able to flee safely, they returned to a home in ruins. 'The place was completely covered in mud. It was unrecognizable. All of our framed family photos, our photo albums, were soaked. Pictures from weddings, my grandchild's shichi-go-san ceremony (a childhood rite-of-passage) — all ruined.' When Osawa joined the sashiko community in December of the same year, she was immediately hooked by the craft's meditative capacity. 'When I was stitching, I didn't have to think about anything else, or worry about the future,' she reflects. 'I could just focus on the needle and thread.' Fellow 'Sashiko Gal' Tomiko Goto, 77, echoes the sentiment: 'Sashiko embroidery has been my greatest source of mental and emotional support. It saved me. I think everyone who loves sashiko feels the same way.' The Spirit of Girlhood Widely believed to have originated in Japan between 200 and 500 years ago, sashiko has been a symbol of strength, resourcefulness and sustainability for centuries. The needlework technique was created to mend and preserve items made of cotton, which was a precious commodity at the time. But rather than being purely utilitarian, the traditional art enhances while repairing — turning worn-out garments into a canvas and breathing new life into them. While the Sashiko Gals' creations have now amassed a global fanbase, the group's journey was not without difficulties. Membership decreased over the years due to people moving away from the town, and the pandemic caused many in-person sales opportunities at department stores and commissions from various companies to be canceled. Wanting to keep the project alive, the women approached Fujiwara, founder of a craft-first Japanese label called Kuon. 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Yomiuri Shimbun
20-06-2025
- Yomiuri Shimbun
Iconic Shikoku ‘Anpanman' Trains Mark 25th Anniversary
Shikoku Railway Co. (JR Shikoku) is marking the 25th anniversary of the launch of its Anpanman trains, which feature characters from the popular anime, picture book and manga series 'Anpanman.' In the Shikoku region, the main mode of transportation is cars, but the company has operated the special train service for a quarter century in the hope that children will experience the joy of traveling by trains. The trains have carried a total of about 1.15 million passengers so far and have come to represent the Shikoku region. A JR Shikoku official said, 'We express our gratitude to people who love [the Anpanman trains] and we want to continue operating them.' Free rides for children The idea for the Anpanman trains was devised partly because Takashi Yanase, the creator of Anpanman, was from Kochi. In October 2000, the first Anpanman train began service as one of the Nampu limited express trains between Kochi and Okayama. According to the company, the train, which was entirely wrapped with pictures of the characters and was operated without a set ending date, was unusual in those days. In 2001, the routes of the Anpanman train service were expanded to sections between Okayama and Matsuyama, and Takamatsu and Matsuyama. New models of Anpanman train cars debuted one after another. They include the YuYu Anpanman Car with play spaces for children, which debuted in 2002; those with reserved seats, called Anpanman Seats, on which pictures of the characters are printed, which debuted in 2005; and the Seto-Ohashi Anpanman Torokko, which has no glass in its windows and debuted in 2006. In 2012, Anpanman trains ran in Miyagi, Iwate and Fukushima prefectures following the devastation of the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake. Children in the damaged areas were invited to ride the trains free of charge. In 2023, the total number of passengers on the Anpanman trains reached 1 million. As of the end of March this year, the total number had risen to about 1.147 million. In recent years, a sizable number of people from Taiwan and other places overseas, where the anime series can be viewed online, have come to the region to ride the trains. Long-term plan In 2000, when the first Anpanman train began service, cars dominated transport in the Shikoku region, partly because of the opening of all sections of the expressways that connect the four prefectural capital cities in the Shikoku region in an X-shaped route. Toshiyuki Umehara, 86, who was then president of JR Shikoku, said that what prompted the start of the Anpanman train service was an opinion poll the company conducted, mainly surveying people on shopping streets in Kochi Prefecture. Regarding how people traveled to Osaka, most of the respondents replied that they used planes. About limited express trains, they replied that 'fares are higher than for planes' and 'the number of trains is too small.' Umehara said: 'Actually, the fares were not so high and the number of trains was large. They had the wrong impression because they had not ridden on our trains.' As he thought, he realized that he wanted people to experience train travel during their childhood and adopted an idea presented by a young employee. Umehara decided to begin limited express Anpanman train services. Umehara recalled his thoughts at the time, saying: 'Children who have ridden in Anpanman trains will surely use trains when they become adults. It was a plan on which more than 20 years would be spent.' Kiyohiro Matsuda, 78, who was then chief of JR Shikoku's train business department and later became president of the company, made the utmost effort to realize the plan. Other company officials voiced doubts such as, 'Babies and infants ride free of charge, so can it really result in a revenue increase?' Despite such worries, Umehara and Matsuda made the decision to introduce the Anpanman trains. The result, Matsuda said, was 'a joyful miscalculation.' Little children rode the trains with their parents, grandparents and other adults, but the number of adults was larger than they had predicted. When services along parts of the company's Dosan Line were suspended for about three months in 1998 due to damage from a torrential rain disaster, Anpanman trains played a role in revitalizing the affected communities after the line was restored. Future generations Twenty-five years since the trains debuted, people who grew up with them now shoulder the business operations of JR Shikoku. Sota Miyoshi, 26, who works in the company's office for the promotion of Anpanman train businesses, has worked as a conductor on Anpanman trains since joining the company in 2021. 'The image of children waving their hands for a long time even after disembarking is imprinted on my mind,' he said. These memories of children overlap with his own as he also waved at Anpanman trains running along the rail tracks in Shikokuchuo, Ehime Prefecture, where he lived as a small child. This fiscal year, JR Shikoku is operating a train with a reproduction of the exterior of the very first Anpanman train. The train will run until Jan. 12 next year between Kochi Station and Tosa Kuroshio Tetsudo Co.'s Nakamura or Sukumo stations. A JR Shikoku official said: 'This is a milestone year when we express our gratitude to the many people who have loved [Anpanman trains]. We want to offer a wide range of related services.'


Asahi Shimbun
16-06-2025
- Asahi Shimbun
Craftmanship fused with expo mascot proves a popular mix
A lacquerware doll of the official Myaku-Myaku mascot of the 2025 Osaka Kansai Expo. A pair of these dolls cost 1.65 million yen ($11,300). (Provided by Nakagawa Masashichi Shoten) The bizarre appearance of Myaku-Myaku, the official mascot of the 2025 Osaka Kansai Expo, has turned heads. Now, the multiple-eyeballed creature is helping a crafts maker turn a profit. Nakagawa Masashichi Shoten, a long-established sundry designer and vendor headquartered in Nara, has created several products themed on Myaku-Myaku for the international event. The company primarily handles practical crafts, so its artisans faced as challenge using Myaku-Myaku as a 'model.' Its unexpected strong sales at the expo have provided encouragement for artisans of old-style craftworks. All formally licensed products of the expo have been developed under the concept of 'Myaku-Myaku meets craftsmanship.' Measuring 25 centimeters tall, a Myaku-Myaku statue made of Nabeshima porcelain from Imari city, Saga Prefecture, carries a price tag of 550,000 yen ($3,790), including tax. Brisk sales of the sculpture since the expo opened on April 13 led to Nakagawa Masashichi Shoten's decision to ramp up production. A public relations representative of the company said the statue's detailed pattern was drawn carefully stroke by stroke. 'Our customers may find the creation not only cute but also novel and attractive,' the official said. A pair of 25-cm-tall lacquerware dolls of Myaku-Myaku are available for a tax-inclusive 1.65 million yen. One of the limited-edition items was bought within a week of its release. The other is expected to be sold through a lottery by the end of May. The many eyes of the lacquer-processed doll are inlayed with mother-of-pearl and have undergone 'rankaku-bari,' a skill in which finely crushed eggshells are applied to the surface before being coated with another layer of lacquer. The doll's body sections were finished through different painting techniques, such as colorful 'kawari-nuri' and blacking 'shin-nuri,' giving the creation a luster and unique presence, according to the company. Tiny plates of renowned Arita ware porcelain, characterized by subtle Myaku-Myaku designs, have also been popular. They cost a tax-inclusive 2,750 yen each. A small 'o-mikuji' oracle statue, crafted from famed Seto ware and priced at 1,650 yen after tax, is named O-myaku-ji. It dispenses random fortunes on strips of paper when the string at its bottom is pulled. These goods have drawn crowds at the official souvenir store on the expo's venue, according to the company. 'Our artisans are delighted that the international fair offered them an opportunity to not only take advantage of their skills but also refine their techniques,' a publicity official of Nakagawa Masashichi Shoten said. For details of the crafts, visit the Japanese website of Nakagawa Masashichi Shoten at (