The Minka and Its Memory
Inside a 200-year-old thatched farmhouse that a young family chose to restore rather than abandon.
An editorial journey through rural Japan — celebrating the quietude of mountain villages, ancestral crafts, and the unhurried rhythm of life rooted in nature.
Inlet Meadow Yard is a print and digital magazine dedicated to the landscapes, traditions, and daily life of rural Japan. From the moss-covered stone paths of Gifu to the firefly evenings of Tohoku, we document places and people that the world passes too quickly to see. Every season brings a new story. Every story begins in the field.
Inside a 200-year-old thatched farmhouse that a young family chose to restore rather than abandon.
Walking the seldom-trodden paths of Kyoto's outermost hills as the first light filters through the canopy.
How three generations of the Tanaka family still farm their mountain plot entirely by hand, following the lunar calendar.
Mountains, rivers, forests, coastal inlets, rice terraces — we map the natural world of Japan's countryside with the eye of a poet and the rigour of a geographer.
Lacquerware, pottery, weaving, carpentry — we profile the craftspeople who keep century-old techniques alive in workshops hidden down unmarked lanes.
Mountain vegetables in spring, river fish in summer, preserved roots in winter. The Japanese countryside table is an edible almanac of the year.
Matsuri, planting rituals, harvest celebrations — the events that stitch together the social fabric of villages across the archipelago.
Every issue begins with a journey — our editors spend weeks embedded in rural communities across Japan, living as guests and neighbours.
No staged shoots. Photography and writing capture daily life, work, weather, and the unsentimental beauty of ordinary rural moments.
Stories are edited, designed, and typeset with care. Print editions are produced on sustainably sourced, uncoated stock that feels as natural as its subject.
Subscribers receive each quarterly issue by post, alongside exclusive digital dispatches, recipe cards, and field-sourced goods from the communities we visit.
Ceramics
Wheel-thrown by Kenji Mori in Mashiko, Tochigi. Each piece is ash-glazed and uniquely marked by the kiln.
¥18,400
Add to CartCraft & Kitchen
Hand-plaited in Oita Prefecture using locally harvested madake bamboo. Suitable for foraging, produce, or display.
¥7,200
Add to CartTextile
Hand-dyed with natural Tokushima indigo. A 90 cm square cloth for wrapping, carrying, or adorning a wall.
¥5,800
Add to CartIn an age of scrolling and skimming, Inlet Meadow Yard invites you to sit with a story, hold a beautifully printed page, and feel the weight of somewhere real.
Each issue is 128 pages of photography, essays, recipes, and seasonal field notes, printed on fine uncoated paper.
Monthly letters from the field — short, personal, unedited. The stories that don't make the magazine but belong somewhere.
Subscribers get 48-hour early access to new Meadow Shop items, many of which sell out before going public.
Kamikatsu, Tokushima. Population: 1,400. Seventy years ago this mountain town had 10,000 residents. Today its remaining families have built the most sophisticated zero-waste system in the world — and they have never once considered leaving.
Our six-page essay follows three generations of one farming household through a single harvest week — an intimate, un-romanticised portrait of continuity in a disappearing Japan.
Read the StoryEvery issue feels like a letter from a friend who lives somewhere impossibly beautiful and takes the time to describe it properly. I read mine cover to cover in one sitting, then again slowly over the following weeks.
London, United Kingdom
I grew up near Nagano and moved to the city at 22. Inlet Meadow Yard reminds me, each quarter, that the countryside is not disappearing — it is changing, and those changes are worth understanding.
Osaka, Japan
The photography alone is worth the subscription. But it is the writing that keeps me renewing year after year — honest, unhurried, and unafraid of complexity. A rare thing in any magazine.
Porto, Portugal
Inlet Meadow Yard has been featured in design, culture, and lifestyle publications, and is held in library collections across Japan, Europe, and North America. We collaborate with cultural foundations, rural tourism boards, and artisan communities throughout the Japanese countryside.
"A rare magazine that actually documents the world with patience and depth."
"Essential reading for anyone interested in Japanese design and rural aesthetics."
"Each issue is a masterclass in editorial design and visual storytelling."
Grant recipient for cultural documentation and international exchange initiatives.
How often is Inlet Meadow Yard published?
We publish four print issues per year — one for each season. Digital dispatches are sent monthly to all subscribers.
Do you ship internationally?
Yes. We ship to over 40 countries. International subscriptions include tracked postal delivery, and shop items are packaged using compostable materials.
How are the products in the Meadow Shop sourced?
Every item is made by an artisan or small producer we have directly visited and featured editorially. We never stock items we have not personally encountered in the field.
Can I purchase a single back issue?
All in-print back issues are available individually. Select sold-out issues are periodically reprinted in small runs — sign up to be notified.
Is there a digital-only subscription?
Yes. Our digital plan includes the full PDF of each issue, monthly dispatch letters, and access to our complete archive from Volume 1.
What it is like to stay in a farmhouse that predates the Meiji era — and the family still living in it.
A botanist and a poet walk the same grove and find they are describing entirely different places.
The practice of planting by lunar cycles has no peer-reviewed endorsement. It also has several thousand years of tradition.
Whether you have a story to pitch, a shop enquiry, or simply want to tell us about a countryside place you think we should visit — we read every message.