• Japanese Tea Canister Tin Hanatsudumi(Flower Drum) Barbados
  • Japanese Tea Canister Tin Hanatsudumi(Flower Drum) Barbados
  • Japanese Tea Canister Tin Hanatsudumi(Flower Drum) Barbados
  • Japanese Tea Canister Tin Hanatsudumi(Flower Drum) Barbados
  • Japanese Tea Canister Tin Hanatsudumi(Flower Drum) Barbados
  • Japanese Tea Canister Tin Hanatsudumi(Flower Drum) Barbados
  • Japanese Tea Canister Tin Hanatsudumi(Flower Drum) Barbados
  • Japanese Tea Canister Tin Hanatsudumi(Flower Drum) Barbados
  • Japanese Tea Canister Tin Hanatsudumi(Flower Drum) Barbados
  • Japanese Tea Canister Tin Hanatsudumi(Flower Drum) Barbados
  • Japanese Tea Canister Tin Hanatsudumi(Flower Drum) Barbados
  • Japanese Tea Canister Tin Hanatsudumi(Flower Drum) Barbados
  • Japanese Tea Canister Tin Hanatsudumi(Flower Drum) Barbados
  • Japanese Tea Canister Tin Hanatsudumi(Flower Drum) Barbados

Product Details

Web ID: 914585
Our company, Noguchi Kumataro Tea Garden (Noguchitokutarosyoten Co., Ltd. Blue Sea Systems 5026 ST Blade Fuse Block With Cover 12 Circuit There are individual differences, and it looks more black than dark blue. Please be careful. The colors are not uniform as they are hand colored by craftsmen. Japanese Tea Canister Tin Hanatsudumi (Flower Drum) Navy Blue /Double Lid /Japanese Washi Paper Pasted /200g Tea Capacity : : HomeAbout this item Highest Quality Unique Textured Japanese Washi Paper with Seasonal Flowers and Paper Cranes and Drums. When the outer lid is turned around, it snaps into place when the patterns match. Air-tight Outer Metal Lid and Food-grade Inner Lid... Loose Tea Storage Japanese Tea Canister Tin Hanatsudumi(Flower Drum) Barbados Tea Canisters For Loose Tea ), was founded in 1874 in Sashima-gun, Ibaraki Prefecture by Kumataro Noguchi, the first generation of tea growers, and we are now in our fifth generation. HANA Washi Paper Red Japanese Tea Canister (Small) - Matcha Yu Tea Size:155mm (H) - 74mm (D),About 200g Loose Tea Made in Japan Sashima-cha became the first Japanese tea exported to the United States in 1859 through negotiations with Townsend Harris, the first U.S. Consul General in Japan. Sashima-gun, Ibaraki Prefecture, has long flourished as a tea production area in the northern part of Japan, and its tea is now called Sashima-cha.