Beyond “kampai!”: a slower way to meet Japanese sake.
Most overseas images of sake are loud—cheers in crowded izakaya,
endless shots with tourists, brand logos everywhere.
But there is another side: quiet breweries,
cedar-scented cups, and the kind of drinking that feels closer to tea ceremony.
Sake from Japan wants to archive and share this slower side of sake,
before small breweries disappear into statistics and export numbers.
- • Seasonal, limited, and local-only bottles
- • Breweries that serve mostly regulars and neighbors
- • Places where silence is part of the tasting
- • One or two cups, not endless rounds
- • Paired with small seasonal snacks
- • Time to actually taste what is in the glass
- • Stories first, logistics second
- • Respect for local pricing and supply
- • A long-term bridge, not a quick boom
Who this project is for.
This is not a generic “Japanese alcohol box”. It is for people who feel that knowing the place and the brewer matters as much as tasting the drink.
- • Prefer slow evenings over loud parties
- • Enjoy pairing drinks with reading, music, or conversation
- • Like exploring different bottles in small quantities
- • Want simple, clear explanations
- • Interested in the human side of breweries
- • Prefer guidance over hype
- • Believe that “small” can mean “precise and beautiful”
- • Want your support to reach real makers, not just platforms
- • Value transparency over buzzwords
What we will create with this campaign.
In the first phase of Sake from Japan, we will build a small but detailed cellar combining short films, photo essays, brewer interviews, and tasting guidance.
- • 4K sequences focusing on atmosphere, not narration
- • Seasonal footage (winter brewing, spring light, etc.)
- • Subtle captions in English for overseas viewers
- • Digital “cellar book” (PDF) with brewery profiles
- • English main text with key Japanese terms kept
- • Designed for reading with a glass in hand
- • Clear notes on aroma, texture, and ideal mood
- • Suggestions for music, snacks, and timing
- • Guidance even if you can only access similar styles locally
- • A dedicated page on sakefromjapan.com
- • Short films on YouTube and other platforms
- • Room to add new breweries in later phases
Funding goal and how we plan to use it.
For the first phase of Sake from Japan, we are preparing a Kickstarter target around US$10,000.
- • Small crew (1–2 people) travelling light
- • Enough days at each brewery to listen, not just film
- • Time for translation, layout, and calm editing
• Travel & on-site production at selected breweries
• Filming, editing, color work, and sound design
• Photography and layout for the digital cellar book
• English text writing & translation support
• Platform fees, payment processing, tax, contingency
• 20–25%: travel & accommodation
• 15–20%: book design, writing, translation
• 10–15%: Kickstarter fees, payment processing, buffer
This site is a pre-launch information page. Final numbers and timelines will be confirmed on the official Kickstarter campaign.
Frequently asked questions.
“This bottle came from a small room in Japan.”
One day, we want you to be able to say that sentence while pouring sake for yourself or for someone you care about.
Sake from Japan is a small attempt to give small breweries and quiet drinkers a shared cellar, instead of leaving everything to big export numbers.