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Furukawashiko 古川紙工

Café Cups Postcard - JAM Retro Printing x Furukawashiko

Café Cups Postcard - JAM Retro Printing x Furukawashiko

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Three cups, each a little different. A postcard that feels like a proper pause.

The design stacks three patterned cups in a warm tower, each with its own colour and character. In classic risograph fashion, the colours sit slightly offset, the edges carry a gentle grain, and the whole thing has the feel of a small print you might find propped against the window of an independent café.

A postcard for sending when the gesture needs to be warm but the words can be few.

  • Perfect paired with a gift of tea or coffee. The card says the rest.
  • Lovely tucked into a care package for someone who needs a slow moment
  • A nice small print for the kitchen noticeboard or café corner at home
  • Works beautifully in a collection alongside other café-themed or illustrated stationery

The details

  • 20gsm matte card stock
  • H148 × W100mm
  • Made in Japan

About JAM Retro Printing

JAM Retro Printing is a risograph printing studio based in Osaka, Japan. Specialising in the art of risograph, their prints embrace the imperfect beauty of the medium: slight colour shifts, vivid ink that fades to the touch, and uneven fills that make every piece feel handmade and unrepeatable.


About Furukawashiko 古川紙工

Established in 1835 during the late Edo period, Furukawashiko is a storied manufacturer based in Mino, Gifu Prefecture, the heart of Japan’s 1,300-year-old Mino Washi tradition. For nearly two centuries, the company has preserved this UNESCO-recognized craft by translating it into modern "wa-stationery" (和文具, stationery that highlights Japanese heritage). They are particularly world-renowned for their charming, palm-sized mini letter sets—and the nostalgic “Watashi Biyori” (私日和) series. By collaborating with contemporary illustrators for limited-edition collections, Furukawashiko bridges ancient paper-making heritage with a playful, retro aesthetic, ensuring the tactile beauty of washi remains a vibrant part of everyday creative writing.

Furukawashiko 古川紙工
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