
The Rainbow Color Born at Sea
May 29, 2026

「EP.134」津軽びいどろ
THE RAINBOW COLOR BORN AT SEA
Aoyama Prefecture
「transcript」
This glass studio's only product became obsolete. The thing that saved it was a handful of sand someone scooped off a beach. Here's how.
In 1949, Hokuyo Glass (北洋硝子) in Aomori prefecture began making glass fishing floats called ukidama (浮き玉). By 1973 it was Japan's biggest producer. Then plastic floats replaced glass, and their main product was gone.
The artisans still had one thing, the skill to blow glass by hand. They just had nothing left worth making with it. So where does the sand come in?
One of them was walking Shichiri Nagahama (七里長浜), a beach down the Aomori coast, and on impulse dropped a handful of its sand into the glass mix. It came out a deep green they had never made before. That accident became their first original color.
From there they built their own color library, over a hundred shades now, crushed into grains called shimo (シモ) and layered onto hot glass to paint Aomori's seasons. Every piece still blown freehand in mid-air, no mold, a technique called chubuki (宙吹き).
Today it's called Tsugaru Vidro (津軽びいどろ), and it used everywhere from flower vases to Starbucks collaborations.
*The assets featured here are the work of their rightful creators, credited below
「sources & assets」
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mPrmo4X15JM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H_2ouA2Ryd0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_aCSzImqt0E
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RnxEWMsru_Q
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FEenNsc9m08
https://tsugaruvidro.jp/about/
https://tsugaruvidro-online.com/blogs/tsugarublog/about-tsugaruvidro
https://tsugaruvidro-online.com/blogs/tsugarublog/technic
https://japanesecrafts.com/collections/tsugaruvidro
https://aomori-tourism.com/feature/detail_284.html
https://story.nakagawa-masashichi.jp/craft_post/115987
https://fashiontechnews.zozo.com/culture/tsugaru_glassware1?page=4
https://www.akomeya.jp/shop/pg/1column-tsugaruvidro/



