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For tattooers and collectors building a stronger irezumi visual vocabulary, The Japanese Tattoo is more than a beautiful coffee-table book. It’s a serious reference for understanding how Japanese tattooing works—symbolism, composition, apprenticeship, and the lived culture around it.
Japanese tattooing is one of the most powerful visual languages in body art—bold, symbolic, and rooted in tradition. In The Japanese Tattoo, author and journalist Manami Okazaki takes you inside the world of Japan’s tattoo masters, exploring philosophies, apprenticeships, and the creative process behind iconic irezumi.
Through interviews, new photography, and archival images, the book traces Japanese tattooing from Edo-period society to contemporary subcultures—capturing its enduring connection to downtown Tokyo life, including fire brigades, festivals, and working-class pride.
Rather than treating motifs as decoration, it shows how mythological, religious, and folkloric figures are built with supporting elements—seasonal motifs and dramatic backgrounds like waves—so the tattoo reads with balance, symbolism, and emotional depth.
Why this belongs on a reference shelf
- Rare access to tattoo masters and multigenerational perspectives
- Cultural context (Edo → today) grounded in interviews and archival material
- Strong visual reference for studying irezumi storytelling and composition
Book details
- Title: The Japanese Tattoo
- Binding: Hardcover (linen)
- Language: English
- Pages: 240
- Illustrations: 220 color illustrations
- Size: 240 × 300 × 24 mm (9.45 × 11.81 × 0.94 in)

