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Japan Ukiyo-e Museum

After stopping at Matsumoto Castle, visitors can satisfy their artistic side with a quick trip to the Japan Ukiyo-e Museum dedicated to 100,000 individual ukiyo-e (woodblock prints) made between the 17th and 20th centuries...

Yokohama Red Brick Warehouse

It's called Aka Renga Soko, or Red Brick Warehouse, and it’s worth a walk around its open grounds to relive a bit of the past...

Shuzenji Onsen

If you’re looking for an outstanding onsen (hot spring) town, then head to Shuzenji Onsen, a few hours’ train ride from Tokyo in the prefecture of Shizuoka...

Yokote Masuda Manga Museum

Famous for rice planting, savory apples, and Akita dogs, who would have thought that Akita Prefecture is also the home of the first manga (comic book) themed museum in Japan...

Obuse Town

Since the Edo Period, Obuse Town in Nagano Prefecture has been an important art and cultural hub...

Ishinomori Manga Museum

At the mouth of the Kitakami River on "Manga Island," the spaceship-like structure of Ishinomaki Mangattan Museum (also known as Ishinomori Manga Museum), stands as a tribute for beloved manga artist Shotaro Ishinomori...

Shimonoseki

Shimonoseki has all the attractions of a large city, a fascinating past, amazing food and easy connections for traveling to your next destination...

Tokyo University Art Museum

Tokyo University Art Museum, located near Ueno Park, has been collecting and displaying some of Japan's most prized artistic and historical treasures for more than 130 years...

Niigata Manga Animation Museum

That most notably includes Yoshifumi Kondo, an animator at Studio Ghibli, Rumiko Takahashi, creator of Inuyasha and the Ranma ½ series, Nobuhiro Watsuki, who is known for Rurouni Kenshin, and Takeshi Obata, the creator of Death Note and Bakuman...

Shitamachi Museum

One of several museums dotted around Ueno Park, Shitamachi Museum is something of a journey into Tokyo's past...

Yunotsu Onsen

Visiting Yunotsu is like jumping into a photograph from the 1900s—a time when Japanese houses didn’t have baths, so hot springs were the only bathing option...

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