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If you’re heading to the Osaka Expo, you need to stop by Kuroneko Yamato’s booth. Trust us. And while they do offer baggage storage and shipping, that’s not why you want to go. Running for the duration of the Expo (through October 13), the “Dreaming World of Kuroneko” has an installation over 100 stickers that […] Related posts: Five Things To Look Forward to at the 2025 World Expo Japan Pavilion Osaka Chooses Googly-Eyed Logo for Expo 2025 and It’s an Obvious Choice Bakers, Knitters and Illustrators are Remixing the 2025 Osaka Expo Logo
a month ago

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More from Spoon & Tamago

Tokyo’s Coolest Cats Take Over Galerie LE MONDE

Discover new artists, take home some new art and do it all for a good cause. The CAT POWER 2025 exhibition is back at Galerie LE MONDE in Harajuku, Tokyo—marking the return of its annual cat‑themed charity show, now in its 10th edition. illustration by Rina Yoshioka, who creates showa-era inspired imagery CAT POWER is […] Related posts: Illustrated Tokyo Storefronts by Mateusz Urbanowicz Bakers, Knitters and Illustrators are Remixing the 2025 Osaka Expo Logo New Imaginary Magazine Covers for the Tokyoiter

2 weeks ago 6 votes
Flushing into the Future: Toto’s High-Tech Health Tracker

Imagine sitting on your toilet and getting a personalized health report sent straight to your phone. No clinic visit, no awkward conversations. Just data, insight, and… well, your poop. This isn’t science fiction anymore. Toilets in Japan have long been known for their innovation: heated seats, bidet functions, even calming sounds to mask noise. But […] Related posts: TOTO Launches Toilet Soccer Goalie TOTO’s Toilet Motorcycle Will Travel Japan Entirely on Biogas Narita Airport’s New Toilet Gallery is a Museum for Bathrooms

3 weeks ago 16 votes
Joe Hisaishi’s ‘Summer’ Reimagined as a Short Film

Originally composed as the main theme for Takeshi Kitano’s 1999 film Kikujiro, Joe Hisaishi’s timeless piece “Summer” has long been cherished in Japan as the soundtrack of nostalgic summer memories. Now, this beloved masterpiece is reimagined as a short film. Set in a high school in the Japanese countryside that’s slated to close next spring, […] Related posts: Japan Society Presents a Festival of New Japanese Film In the summer time our genitals become itchy Miss Hokusai: an animated film that tells the story of an artist lost in her father’s shadow

3 weeks ago 20 votes
In a New Pop-Up Exhibition, Erica Ward Presents Tokyo as a Living, Breathing Organism

all images courtesy the artist | used with permission Erica Ward is a California-born ink and watercolor artist who has called Tokyo her home for over 10 years. Inspired by Japanese designs and imagery, as well as the ever-changing landscape of Tokyo, Ward reinterprets everyday sights and objects in surreal ways within her artworks, asking […] Related posts: The Tokyoiter Presents Diverse Visions of Tokyo Louis Vuitton Tokyo City Guide &TOKYO: City of Tokyo Announces New Logo

4 weeks ago 21 votes
Haneno Suzuki Brings Playful Lines to Shibuya

Tokyo-based artist Haneno Suzuki has a way of turning something everyday as paper into something completely unexpected in her solo exhibition “Playful Lines“, currently on view at (Place) by Method in Shibuya. Running from July 4th to 19th, 2025, the show invites visitors to explore a surprising world where paper becomes architectural and organic at […] Related posts: PAP Coffee in Harajuku is a Haven for Coffee and Paper Lovers Airvase: a free-sculpting paper vase Void and Solid: Katsumi Hayakawa Explores Architectural Density With Floating Paper City

a month ago 22 votes

More in travel

A Glimpse Into The Future: The Big Things On The Horizon For London

New museums, bridges and trains.

11 hours ago 2 votes
Commuter puzzle pages

If you're still commuting to the office, or if you just need something to read on the train, three free London newspapers continue to make themselves available outside stations. Some people start with the news and gossip, others the sport, but many simply turn to the puzzle page and whip out a pen. So which puzzle page is the best, and why hasn't anyone passed judgement on this before? Commuter puzzle page review METRO Sudoku: There are three of these starting with Easy, then Medium, then Hard. I think the last designation used to be Challenging sometimes, but Metro changed its puzzle provider at the end of last year and difficulty levels changed somewhat. The Easy sudoku used to be damned simple, a swift write-in with no head-scratching, but the new incarnation is noticeably less straight-forward. Meanwhile The Hard isn't quite as hard, though still tough, and sometimes I will fail to see a way forward before chucking the newspaper in the bin. Crosswords: A Cryptic and a Quick, each on a 13×13 grid. The Cryptic is less cryptic than a broadsheet, with clues like "Ogre from Georgian town (5)", "Bed with little hesitation providing nonsense (6)" and "Authorisation for take off (6,7)". Sometimes the lack of a subsidiary clue makes it hard to complete but generally it's doable. The Quick is fair thanks to decent-length clues, but with an occasional deviation into general knowledge demand. Wordsearch: For when you don't really need to put your brain in gear, merely fill time before reaching your destination. Word scramble: Six themed anagrams, potentially tough if you're not on the right wavelength for the theme of the day (groups from the 1990s: BEST YOKE BRACTS, GRASP USERS, SEE OAF CAB) Split words: Not something I've seen elsewhere, essentially dead simple anagrams for people who can't do anagrams (one word film titles: V EHE ART BRA, A ARM DON GED, OR AD GL AT I) Add up: A pyramid of single digits to total in order to find the top number. As arithmetic goes it's basically 8-year-old standard so hardly taxing, although if you've got a higher qualification you'll be aware that a shortcut to the summit total is a+4b+6c+4d+e. Word Wheel: An old favourite where you try to construct words from the given letters, maybe attempting to scribble them down into the tiny gap in the margin. Personally I never bother because there isn't a solution, merely a target so there's no satisfaction from completion. Conclusion: Whether you're a words person or a numbers person there should be enough in the Metro to keep you occupied on your journey - a proper puzzling time sink. But not every day. Two additional puzzles appear - Numberfit and KrissKross - both of which are essentially the same jigsaw task with either numbers or letters. With a bit of effort they could have been constructed to be challenging but they're not, so with ambiguity absent it's not difficult to start slotting everything in. Many people appreciate a simple puzzle, and on Thursdays that's what they get. CITY AM City AM doesn't really do puzzles, indeed even the title 'Coffee Break' suggests it's not for tackling on a journey, rather saving for a spare 15 minutes later. One sudoku, one word wheel, one crossword... and it's not even a decent crossword, it's a quickie slotted into an 11×11 grid. The only innovation is Kakuro, the Japanese puzzle where each horizontal and vertical block has to add up to a certain total. It's always a satisfying solve but again somewhat on the small side given the density of the grid. Puzzle Press who construct puzzling content of all kinds for publications nationwide. They're based in Norfolk, a world away from the Square Mile, and have been doing this kind of thing for years so if you need a puzzle spread do get in touch. Conclusion: More a token presence than a busy spread, but even this is an improvement on the complete absence of puzzles in City AM until a few years ago. I'm surprised because I'd have thought financial types would have relished a mental challenge, but maybe that's why the number puzzles are tougher than the word puzzles. THE STANDARD Double Crossword: This is a clever use of space, a set of cryptic clues and a set of quick clues using the same grid. You have to pick one or the other, the answers aren't the same, as you'll soon discover if you try to mix the two. Battleships: Everyone knows how to play this, but can you get the totals on each row and column to tally? I enjoy this one and I generally get it correct about 90% of the times. Codeword: Another puzzle page staple but the Standard is the only freebie still to include it. Three letters always feels insufficient to get started, but once you find an opening it generally all pans out as all the words inexorably reveal themselves. Circlegram: More of a novelty this, a themed venn diagram with one overlapping missing letter. What I can't believe is that anyone ever wants to solve this so desperately that they contact The Standard's clue service at £1 a pop, let alone that this makes the paper any money. The Tube Quiz: A Standard exclusive, a chain of tube map stations to identify by solving a set of clues. Some are general knowledge, some more cryptic, and as the years have passed they've become increasingly contrived because there's only a finite number of ways of clueing Oxford Circus. "Which station is an anagram of OUTFOX CLOSURE SCHEME?" and "The Crown and Treaty pub, which hosted abortive peace negotiations during the English Civil War, is located in which town?" are two of this week's ridiculousnesses. Gogen: This is my favourite, a 5×5 grid into which the letters A-Y have to be fitted so that a specific set of words can be traced out. In fact it's a shame I now only get to play this once a week, if I'm lucky, so I'm pleased to have discovered a website where I can enjoy a Gogen daily. Sudoku: Just the one grid here but generally the standard of Metro's 'Hard'. Comes with a 30 minute target to beat, so technically you could get all the way from London Bridge to Orpington without managing to deduce the final digits. Quick Crossword: And finally another crossword, just the simple clues this time. It's from the American school whereby clues are single words and most letters overlap, so words like ERA, LEES and ASTER appear a lot (this week 10 across, 18 down and 32 down respectively). Conclusion: A bumper collection to suit allsorts, showing some originality and with plenty to keep you busy. A quality offering that's better than it needs to be. Overall conclusion: Given the choice I'd always reach for the Standard first, indeed its puzzles are more engrossing than ploughing through its slanted articles. But if it's not a Thursday then the three sudoku in the Metro usually keep me occupied, then the crosswords if it's a longer trip. City AM generally remains in its hopper. Observation: At least Londoners do still have puzzles as part of a free newspaper offering that continues to provide a valuable and informative service. Nothing quite beats filling in a grid with a pen rather than tapping on a screen, but I fear one year in the not-too-distant future we may no longer have the option. Yield (4). Delete (5). Finish (6).

13 hours ago 2 votes
Did You Know You Can Hire Part Of The Southbank Centre For Private Events?

Brutalist icon up for grabs.

7 hours ago 1 votes
16 postcards from Southend

Yesterday's forecast was for clear skies and temperatures nudging 30 degrees, so I slapped on the suncream and steeled myself for a sweaty seaside promenade. Instead a sheet of high cloud spanned the Thames estuary, thickening later to bring showers, but everyone who'd come to enjoy a summer's day carried on regardless. So here are 16 postcards from Southend. Nearest station: Southend East ✉ Southchurch Hall is an extraordinary survivor, just five minutes south of Southend East station. This unlikely medieval manor house finds itself set adrift amid a grid of uncompromising suburban terraces, surrounded by ornamental gardens and a square moat. It looks wonky because it's from 1354 and pristine because it was substantially rebuilt in 1930 when the council first got their hands on it. It now forms a key part of Southend's heritage portfolio and is free to pop in, so long as you don't arrive too early in the day or in the week. Inside is an unexpectedly large timbered hall, the illusion only ruined by the fire extinguishers by the stairwell, which I guessed correctly is often hired out by the council for weddings. Other rooms nod to different eras - a Tudor Kitchen, a Stuart solar, a Victorian bedroom - and are bedecked with wooden artefacts of dubious intrinsic provenance. It's all very brown. A small gift shop provides a selection of pocket money souvenirs, also a panelled backhistory, and if you thought Southend was all bawdy beach fun then at least these fifteen minutes aren't. ✉ The Kursaal remains closed while its current owner works out what to do with it. The seafront entertainment complex had been hanging on as a bowling alley and casino but they closed in 2019 and 2020 respectively. Several shonky amusement arcades remain nearby. ✉ Behind the Kursaal, on land once occupied by on its outdoor entertainments, is the surprisingly enormous Woodgrange estate. Its blocks of terraced flats were knocked up in the 1970s and given unlikely names reflecting the site's provenance including Coaster Steps, Ferris Steps, Skelter Steps and Swingboat Terrace. They're from the "oh, bung all the car parking in a pillared space under the flats" school of architecture and have a poor social reputation locally. Calling one of the blocks Crystal Steps probably doesn't help. Nearest station: Southend Central ✉ Adventure Island continues to pack them in, partly because it's free to enter but also because we've reached the increasingly desperate second half of the summer holidays. The sunken garden is rammed with rides and attractions, many of them textbook examples of vertical rides within a minimal footprint. A day wristband costs £25 but an annual pass is currently available for £50 which seems excellent value if you're local and like screaming in midair. Yesterday's influx included scouts from Stanford-le-Hope and guides from Wickford, while the youngsters in blue Love Fun t-shirts turned out to be summer staff keeping the funfair ticking over. ✉ It's never too early to be thinking about Remembrance, so the people of Southend are being invited to knit poppies and pop them in a box ready for November. The plan is to line the 1.3-mile long pier with red handmade poppies (crocheting is also acceptable) to create a poignant yarnbomb tribute. So far they've received 17974 poppies, and I guess they can always space them out more if numbers fall short. Postal donations are also accepted. ✉ Southend's Edwardian cliff lift is now free and has been since August 2023. Donations are welcomed. While I was watching it a family nipped inside for a descent to beach level while a pair of pensioners puffed up the steps alongside, and I don't think either of them realised the true benefits are in an upward direction. ✉ The town's floral clock sits atop the cliffs near the Queen Victoria statue. The flowers are pristine but the clock presents a problem because it's flat and numberless so it's not possible to work out where the 12 is. All I can say is that the angle between the two hands was totally wrong for twenty past twelve so I assume it's broken. Nearest station: Westcliff ✉ The famous Cliffs Pavilion, the epitome of 60s leisure chic, is currently undergoing major refurbishment. The hexagonal sunken forecourt has been replaced by a worksite, what used to be the main upper entrance is now closed and finding a way in involves thinking "hang on, seriously, round here?" A slew of crowd-pleasing tribute acts are lined up over the coming months, also the actual Jack Dee, Tim Peake and Level 42, while Rylan returns to play the part of the Fairy Godfather in Cinderella this Christmas. Where else would he go? ✉ It's nigh impossible to walk past a Rossi's ice cream kiosk without buying two scoops of lemon ice, or maybe that's just me. BestMate instead plumped for one scoop of Creme Egg and one of Biscoff, which the menu outside felt it necessary to explain with the footnote 'Taste Like The Biscuit'. ✉ Southend's open-topped buses are running again, linking Leigh-on-Sea to Shoeburyness until mid-September. The route number is 99 so they've gone big on ice cream cornet imagery, hence this particular vehicle is called the Bubblegum Beachcomber. £5.50 return, £3.50 single. Nearest station: Chalkwell ✉ There's a fine sewage-tinged scum at present in the water lapping against the edge of Chalkwell beach. I was surprised to see so many families gambolling on the mudflats as the tide bubbled in, but I don't think the worst of the detritus makes it as far as the sandy patch artificially delivered to the edge of the esplanade. ✉ The biggest change since I was last in Southend is that a bronze statue of murdered MP Sir David Amess has been added to the shoreline near the Lifeguards base, overlooking the promenade where he used to walk his dogs. It's not a convincing likeness - his grin is insufficiently broad - but close enough and a touching tribute to the unwitting harbinger of city status. ✉ The new house facing the railway at 88 Undercliff Gardens is a jarringly modern townhouse, all curves and bright white surfaces. A flat roof replaced a pitched roof, and in a bold architectural statement a glazed teardrop now faces the estuary. Because I've subsequently read the planning application I know there's also a zen pebble garden up top, and that the council initially rejected it then swiftly relented. I suspect the neighbours hate it. Nearest station: Leigh-on-Sea ✉ Is there a fibreglass animal parade in Southend this summer? Yes of course, it's called Waddle-on-Sea and it's all about penguins. To think, people used to get excited about this kind of thing. ✉ Leigh-on-Sea's Old Town is a proper watering hole these days, with a chain of traditional fishermen's pubs along the narrow High Street. The largest is The Peterboat whose outdoor beer terrace crams them in, seemingly with space for half of Essex, although the tables weren't fully occupied after a recent cloudburst. For the more discerning drinker, a waiter will scuttle across the road carrying a rosé and a white wine from The Crooked Billet. ✉ For fresh seafood you want Osborne's but pick your outlet carefully. Their cafe in the old town does sit-down king prawns, pints of cockles and crab sandwiches (add £2 for salad leaves, coleslaw and tortilla chips on a soft white roll). But for slightly more wholesale prices try the fishmongery shed on the way to the back way to the station - still not cheap but BestMate was pleased to be heading home with a pack of octopus arms, thankfully not locally caught.

yesterday 3 votes
Paul McCartney's Beatlemania-Era Photos On Show At Free London Exhibition

Rearview Mirror: Liverpool–London–Paris.

2 days ago 4 votes