A 1cm Work of Art

Oct 10, 2025

fishing hooks, feathers, fishing, hooks

「EP.79」 播州毛鉤

BANSHU KEBARI
Hyogo Prefecture

「transcript」

The history of fly hooks in Japan goes back to Kyoto in the 1600s. By the late Edo period the craft spread to Hyogo’s Banshu region, where farmers made them in the off-season. In the Meiji era they gained national fame, winning prizes at fishery expositions and becoming trusted gear for anglers.

Made for dobu-zuri style fishing for sweetfish called ayu, Banshu Kebari mimic aquatic insects with feathers bound by silk thread, finished with lacquer and gold leaf.

Each hook takes 10–20 minutes, even for veteran artisans. The process begins with a lacquer coat, then feathers from sparrows, pheasants, or Nagoya Cochin roosters are wrapped with delicate precision. The challenge is fanning the feathers evenly so the hook moves like a real insect underwater. A final touch of lacquer and gold leaf completes the head.

Unlike mass-produced synthetic fly hooks, Banshu Kebari are miniature works of art. With over 500 varieties for different seasons and rivers, they are prized by collectors and often displayed like jewelry.

They remain trusted by anglers and are also turned into modern accessories enjoyed by many.

*The assets featured here are the work of their rightful creators, credited below

「sources & assets」

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pb-Gv1rOafg

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iHT3cFNyWqs

https://kogeijapan.com/locale/ja_JP/banshukebari/

https://kougeihin.jp/craft/1414/

https://www.thebecos.com/collections/banshu-fishing-flies

https://kitaharima-jibasan.org/banshubari02.html

http://www.bantsuri.com/kebari/story/index.html

https://www.nikkei.com/article/DGXMZO64852470Z01C20A0AA1P00/

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