Café in the World – Vivid Oriental

When we talk about East Asian countries like Japan and Korea, an energetic vibrant young image just pops up. From culture like anime/manga, to people like PSY or the trending BTS, the ‘Kawaii’ aesthetics always indulge the world’s every whim!

#CUTENESSOVERLOAD


Kawaii Monster Cafe, Tokyo

The cafe is located in the origin of ‘Kawaii’ culture, Harajuku. With ornaments under a fantasy theme, the cafe is divided into 4 zones: Mushroom Disco, Milk Stand, Bar Experiment, Mel-tea Room; with a huge merry go round in between.

All the waitress are dressed up in lolita/something like a cosplayer, with a impactful wig. They have to perform and they must remain super hyper to deliver their character settings. (respect!)

I didn’t make a special request of where I want to sit, and they kind of gathered people to the same zone for their ease of management. This is the mushroom zone I guess.

If you want to stay in a quiet zone, just sit away from the merry go round. Coz when there are events or birthdays of customers, all the monster girls (that’s how they call the waitress) come out and dance around the carousel.

I ordered a colorful spaghetti and a drink. The spaghetti is called ‘Colorful Rainbow Pasta‘, it’s a spaghetti in several colors, with 5 different sauce in different colors. Not bad, but the portion is too small, and it’s hard to find the difference between the sauce except for the spicy ones. The drinks are the most ‘normal’ thing in the cafe, coz yea there are too many fancy drinks out there! A well expected sweet artificial taste I would say.

I was really surprised by the dessert. It’s called ‘Colorful Poison Parfait‘. Despite its stunning outlook, it doesn’t taste like a mixture of food additives. I think they really custom-made each of the ice-cream, or they got really good-quality ones. Each color within the dessert has its own taste of fruit, me and my friend were happily guessing all of that. It’s 2300 yen, ~20 USD, very expensive but it’s huge!

A stamp will be given upon each visit, and you can get a free gift after you complete all the zones.

Remember to go in daytime.
It turns into a normal dinner place at night. Check before u go:)

Website


Tenmonkan Mujaki, Kagoshima

Kagoshima is the southest city in Japan, except Okinawa. It’s not a metropolitan city, but the dessert ‘Shirokuma” is a long lasting national super-hit.

The name Tenmonkan came from the name of the street, and the company has an entire building which contains 4 different styled restaurants – grill, dessert & light snacks only cafe, western and traditional Japanese.

I chose the traditional restaurant on the 4th floor, had to store my shoes at the entrance.

A very traditional tatami set. You can order hot pot + shirokuma set, very cheap, less than 25 USD.

This is Shirokuma (original flavour)! Unlike shaved ice/sorbet, the ice is very milky. According to the homepage, it’s all about the secret milk & syrup recipe. For the decorations, there are fruits, jellies, raisins, Japanese cake and Japanese marinated beans. There are a lot more variations of Shirokuma, but the original flavor was the best among me and my friends’. If you can’t eat much, you can order a smaller size, the normal is bigger than a coconut.

Remember to take a picture with the mascot Shirokuma. ‘Shirokuma’ means white bear in Japanese.

Website


Caffe Yam, Seoul

Caffe Yam is in Hongdae, the popular Hongik University area packed with young people. This cafe is just one of the millions fancy cafes around, not very outstanding, so there’s a chance you can find a seat 🙂

The cafe is small, so it’s pretty crowded, if you have a chance, take the window seats with rocking chairs. Looking at the youngsters in Hongdae street, rocking while studying their fashion.

The theme of the cafe is fairy tales! Super girly, with ponies, unicorns and mermaids. There are costumes and different props for you to take your instagram picture, free of charge.

Website


Sweet Paradise, Japan

(c) Sweet Paradise official

Sweet Paradise is a national chain dessert cafe. All with different themes, or sometimes collaboration with anime/characters/festivals…

Every teenager in Japan knows Sweet Paradise, coz of the price.

1320 yen (ard 12 USD), all you can eat, all you can drink.
There are a few kind of pasta, rice and tons of cakes, dessert and drinks to pick from.

Website



A word to conclude…

Many of Japan and Korea cafes are full of colors and gimmick. They prioritize ‘visual impact’ and ‘social media sharing’ over relaxation. If you want to read a book, maybe you have to pick wise. Is it a bad thing? I would say it’s a NO, you can get vitalized from the young vibrant power!

[Japan] where Ghibli becomes real – last episode

Shikoku (四国) is one of the five main islands of Japan, and probably the least popular one among tourists. Yet, it hosts one of the world’s biggest contemporary art festival, Setouchi Triennale (瀬戸内国際芸術祭) every three years. For this reason, the Ghibli power is never a spotlight for the provinces, as the artistic image is overwhelming.

Kiki’s Delivery Service (live-action), Shodoshima

Instead of reference, they actually shot the live-action at Shodoshima Olive Park. It is the first farm that successfully planted olives in Japan.

Nowadays, it is being used as a Kiki X Olive theme park. There are brooms for free rental, remember to hook it back on the rack besides the concierge.

There are varies props for people to get instagrammable pics. Trend is to capture the moment of jumping with the broom, to imitate Kiki, the witch trainee riding it.

Kiki’s home in the movie, actually exists as a shop. It’s close to the olive branches, you can collect olive leaves and DIY your own bookmark.

A mile from the Olive Park main attractions, there is a building called ‘Sun Olive‘, which has an open-air hot spring with phenomenal sea view.

Access

There are ferries from many nearby cities. The fastest and most frequent service is from Takamatsu. After you get off the pier, take the Shodoshima Olive bus and get off at the Olive Park.

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Spirited Away, Matsuyama

Matsuyama has many historical features.

From the train station to trams, all of them are in antique style. But still, Matsuyama is relatively busier than Takamatsu.

Dogo Onsen is a hot spring facility, where the ‘Honkan‘ part (oldest building) is being used as the reference for Spirited Away’s bath. The building is a Meiji Period wooden public bathhouse dating from 1894.

There were quite a lot of people (it was holiday in Jap), we had to buy the ticket from the box office, and enter later at the assigned time. There are different packages mainly defined by floors, mine include snacks and reserved seats on the 2nd floor. 1st floor is the big area and 3rd floor has private rooms.

Everyone get changed to Yukata in the restroom at the very beginning. On the 2nd floor, there were good shampoo (Shiseido tsubaki), soap and hairdryer, there was nothing when I went to the 1st floor. But the main onsen is on the 1st floor…not that impressive though, but the one on 2nd floor is just like a bigger bathtub. You wear the yukata when you travel among the floors and take it off at the locker room outside each bath.

After you finished bathing, they will give you traditional snacks, cookies (eaten before I took a pic sorry) and refillable tea. (I bought the milk) There is a shop right next to the resting space, selling souvenirs and beverages. Surprisingly, the price was quite cheap, soap was 200 yen and towels were less than 1000.

Before you go, a staff will show you around the building, in your preferred language. You can visit the terrance and look back to the city.


Access

Take the JR Shinkansen to Matsuyama station, change to trams and get off at ‘Dogo Onsen’ station. You need to walk pass the entire souvenir street to see the building.

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Bonus

Relatively not popular Ghibli titles, ‘Whisper of the Heart’ and ‘Pom Poko’, both referenced a small town in western Tokyo, ‘Seiseki Sakuraga oka’ (聖蹟桜ケ丘). Almost everything of ‘Whisper of the Heart’ are based on the town, so it’s a must-go if you are a fan. Reach by Keio Line from Shinjuku.