Mugiwara Zaiku is a traditional type of craft that nowadays is practiced in just one location in Japan, Kinosaki Onsen in northern Hyogo.
It uses dyed wheat straw that is cut into intricate patterns kind of like marquetry and other types of inlay.
It is most commonly used to decorate boxes, though it is also used for other objects like fans or dolls.
The straw is prepared, dyed, then cut and flattened.
Nowadays modern chemical dyes allow a wide range of sometimes bright colours, but traditionally the colours would have been more natural earth tones.
As well as being cut, like veneers in traditional marquetry, the strips of straw are sometimes woven into patterns before being used.
In the early 18th century a visitor to the hot springs from Tottori, a certain Hanhichi, made small objects out of the local straw to help fund his travels.
Local people imitated his work and now Kinosaki is the only place in the country where it is still practiced.
The European physician Siebold took examples of mugiwara zaiku back with him in the 19th centuryand are on display at several museums in Europe.
The collections are of such good quality that craftsmen from Kinosaki traveled to Europe in 2001 to study them. As well as shops selling the crafts now in Kinosaki there is also a small museum dedicated to the craft housed in a former storehouse. Here visitors can take classes and produce their own articles.