Shou Sugi Ban

The Traditional Japanese Art of Charred Cedar

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  • Home ホームページ
  • Overview 概要
    • History
    • People
    • Architecture
    • Design
  • News ニュース
  • Techniques 技術
    • Shou Sugi Ban 101
    • DIY Projects
  • Video ビデオ
  • Shop 日本 店

Overview

Shou Sugi Ban 焼杉板 (or Yakisugi) is an ancient Japanese exterior siding technique that preserves wood by charring it with fire. Traditionally, sugi 杉 (Cryptomeria japonica L.f.), also called Japanese red-cedar, was used. The process involves charring the wood, cooling it, cleaning it, and finishing it with a natural oil.

Today Shou Sugi Ban is an environmentally friendly way to preserve timber and, paradoxically, make it fire-resistant. Chemical preservatives, paints and retardants are therefore unnecessary. In addition to exterior uses, the popular technique is now found in interior rooms, furniture, and artwork.

Learn more…

Architecture, Design, News, Showcase, Tiny Home, Video

IKEA Inspires a Tiny House

IKEA has built a tiny home that’s living large. Refreshingly the house doesn’t skimp on style or amenities, and it has been designed with sustainability at its core. The tiny house…

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October 7, 2021
Architecture, Design, News, Showcase

Shou Sugi Ban Atelier in an Orchard

The architects of Dutch studio XVW architectuur designed the Atelier in an Orchard, a small building combining contemporary form with the Japanese Shou Sugi Ban technique to create a simple,…

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August 12, 2021
Architecture, Design, News, People, Showcase

Shou Sugi Ban binds Art and Architecture in Spectral Bridge House

A unique collaboration between EYRC Architects and an internationally known artist, this house could be called “a vessel for living and art.” The artist Johannes Girardoni created site-specific projects that…

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September 10, 2020
  • Architecture,  Design,  News,  Showcase,  Tiny Home,  Travel

    Escape to a Tiny Cabin on an Icelandic Lava Field

    The charred timber skin of this sustainable cabin blends it with the craggy 300-year-old lava field surrounding Lake Mývatn in northern Iceland – the first of a new campsite in the scenic area. Danish-Icelandic practice Studio Heima designed the 21 sq m tiny home, dubbed Aska (or Ash, in English), borrowing from Japanese and Nordic design elements. Light pine plywood lines the cabin’s interiors to contrast the burnt pine cladding, charred using the Japanese technique shou sugi ban to protect it from the harsh elements and add to its longevity. The interior is maximized via tall ceilings and bespoke furniture, including a double bedroom, bath and open plan kitchen with large picture windows looking on the Hverfjall Volcano and Lake…

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    Farmhouse Fixer find Shou Sugi Ban Barn Doors a Delight

    March 8, 2025

    Shou Sugi Ban in the UK

    May 2, 2017

    A Modern Retreat at the Far Edge of Ireland

    June 19, 2020
  • Architecture,  Design,  DIY,  News,  Showcase,  Techniques

    PaperWall replicates Shou Sugi Ban for WallPaper

    PaperWall, the newest addition to the Elton Group collection, is a wood fibre based paper surface that replicates the patterning, grain and texture of timber and other materials with impressive realism. PaperWall: A wallpaper that replicates the patterning, grain and texture of timber and other materials with unrivaled realism. Among the finishes are a wide range of oak looks – from pale oak to charcoal oak – a Shou Sugi Ban finish, corten steel and concrete. The innovative surface is achieved through a combination of high-definition printing and precision embossing, the alignment between natural grain and texture creating a surface almost indistinguishable from the real thing. PaperWall is sourced from well-managed,…

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    Chotto Matte Plays with Tokyo-Meets-Miami Design Award

    July 14, 2020

    Fujimori’s Shou Sugi Ban Technique

    May 2, 2017

    Shou Sugi Ban: A Popular New/Old Technique For Treating Wood

    August 11, 2020
  • Architecture,  Design,  News,  Showcase

    Charred Timber Sauna Emerges on French Lakeside

    Located in the countryside of Aveyron, in the south of France, ‘lakeside sauna’ by Atelier AJO takes shape as a small wooden cabin formed by a group of friends using mainly timber from the neighboring sawmill. Between cows and meadows, the project is strategically placed on the pond shore of a lake, facing the beech forest and the sunset. Built on light foundations (micro piles), it does not impact the fragile structure of the dike and can be easily removed. The sauna by Atelier AJO emerges from the ground as an exogenous object, standing on a light structure. Two different levels of benches for different heat tolerances model the outer shape of the sauna. The outside facade is…

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    Escape to a Shou Sugi Ban Tree House in the English Forest

    February 10, 2019

    DIY Shou Sugi Ban on HGTV

    May 2, 2017

    Shou Sugi Ban Atelier in an Orchard

    August 12, 2021
  • Design,  News,  People,  Showcase,  Techniques

    Noir Sculptural Objects Create a Lyrical Effect

    Call it the new noir. Black finishes are bringing sculptural furniture into focus as never before. In porcelain, bronze, walnut and other natural materials, well-designed objects are coming out of the shadows to shine in every room of the house. “There is something powerful about the serenity and mystery of these essential shapes,” says Belgian-born designer Pieter Maes, who works with a bronze foundry in Ghent, Belgium, on his organic, softly curving tables and stools. “I became obsessed with making simple, unfussy work that triggers something very old and dormant in people, no matter where or when someone comes from.” Blackening a surface is as old as fire itself, points…

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    Silicon Valley Retreat takes Cues from Shou Sugi Ban and Nature

    February 8, 2019

    A Teahouse, Charred and Blackened (On Purpose)

    February 19, 2014

    Dragon Mansion Clad in Striking Shou Sugi Ban Exterior

    June 9, 2025
  • Architecture,  Design,  News,  Showcase,  Travel

    Contemporary Lakeside Getaway becomes Refuge

    On the surface, the house doesn’t look terribly different than the many century-old farmsteads dotting the surrounding fields. The overall shape, conceived by Montreal architecture office RHA Works in collaboration with Toronto-and-Maine-based AAMP Studio, borrows from local barns, with pitched roofs over long, simple boxes. To the well-honed eye, the exterior siding provides the first clue that the house is unique. It’s clad in shou sugi ban – planks of cedar, charred using a Japanese technique that brings out the wood’s natural insect-and-rot resistance. The boards, sourced from a company called Blackwood Siding Co, are not only more durable than typical, unfinished cedar, they have a rich, distinct aesthetic. “From…

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    Kebony brings Sustainable Shou Sugi Ban to UK

    October 10, 2024

    Shou Sugi Ban Mountain Refuge in Chilean Andes

    May 1, 2019

    Intersecting Shou Sugi Ban Gables create Abstract Quebec Home

    July 5, 2019
 Older Posts
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The Traditional Japanese Art of Charred Cedar

Shou Sugi Ban 焼杉板 (or Yakisugi) is an ancient Japanese exterior siding technique that preserves wood by charring it with fire. Traditionally, sugi 杉 (Cryptomeria japonica L.f.), also called Japanese red-cedar, was used. The process involves charring the wood, cooling it, cleaning it, and finishing it with a natural oil.

Today Shou Sugi Ban is an environmentally friendly way to preserve timber through charring which, paradoxically, makes it fire-resistant. Chemical preservatives, paints and retardants are therefore unnecessary. In addition to exterior uses, the popular technique is now found in interior rooms, furniture, and artwork.
Learn more…

Recent Posts

  • Dragon Mansion Clad in Striking Shou Sugi Ban Exterior
    June 9, 2025
  • Serpentine Pavilion in Freeform Shou Sugi Ban style
    May 16, 2025
  • In England, Couple Builds a Serene Shou Sugi Ban Retreat
    April 12, 2025
  • Farmhouse Fixer find Shou Sugi Ban Barn Doors a Delight
    March 8, 2025
  • Waterfront Mid-Century Home in Seattle gets Shou Sugi Ban Treatment
    February 12, 2025

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Further Reading

  • Suminagashi books
  • Shou Sugi Ban books
  • Sake books
  • Wabi-sabi books
  • Sumi-e books
  • Shodo books
  • Bonsai books
  • Origami books
  • Ukiyo-e books
  • Ikebana books
  • Feng Shui books
  • Japanese Cookbooks
  • Travel to Japan
  • Learn Japanese
  • Learn More

    • Nihon : The Culture of Japan
    • Suminagashi :  Japanese Marbling
    • Shou-sugi-ban : Charred Panels
    • Sake : Rice Wine
    • Wabi-sabi : The Art of Imperfection
    • Sumi-e : Ink Brush Painting
    • Shodo : Calligraphy
    • Bonsai : Gardening
    • Origami : Paper Folding
    • Ukiyo-e : Woodblock Printing
    • Ikebana : Flower Arranging Artistry

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