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Katō Hiroshige (加藤裕重) is a 14th generation potter, and the 12th head of Kitagama Kasen (喜多窯 霞仙), based in the Akazu hills in Seto, Aichi Prefecture. In the early Edo period (early 1600s), his family was one of four protected by the Owari Branch of the Tokugawa Shogunate in order to fire tea ceremony utensils on the grounds of Nagoya Castle. These Oniwa-yaki (garden fired) wares for the Nagoya Tokugawa developed into a style called Ofukei (御深井) (named, potentially, after the particular area of the castle grounds). His family's kiln is a branch of the Katō Tozaburō line, (加藤唐三郎) which is the only remaining of those original four. Located in Akazu, Katō-san is one of only a dozen or so potters still active in this historic region. Akazu-yaki is often seen as merely a subset of Seto-yaki, however Akazu is one of the oldest pottery sites in the region. Many of the styles associated with Mino-yaki were originally developed in Akazu. The turmoils of the Sengoku Era caused potters to flee the Seto region over the mountains to Mino. 00:00 - Introduction 00:49 - Akazu, Seto, and Mino-yaki History 02:28 - Locally Sourced Ingredients 05:10 - Glaze Recipes 08:45 - Ko-Seto 10:00 - Ki-Seto 11:39 - Shino 12:48 - Nezumi Shino 14:15 - Oribe 15:10 - Kuro-Oribe 19:02 - Ao-Oribe 21:02 - Tochishibu 23:50 - Ofukei 26:02 - Kato-san's Favourite aspects 27:08 - Final Notes Links: https://www.tezumi.com Katō Hiroshige's Wares: https://www.tezumi.com/collections/hi... Find us here: Instagram: / tezumitea