Hightide New Retro Jacquard Woven Hand Towel
Description
A charming hand towel with a nostalgic twist, the Hightide New Retro Hand Towel features playful, three-dimensional retro illustrations inspired by everyday life in Japan. Made from 100% cotton, it offers a soft texture and high absorbency, making it a practical yet stylish addition to any home.
Measuring 25cm x 25cm, this compact towel is ideal for daily use in the kitchen, bathroom, or on the go. The collection includes four unique designs: Gyoza, Coffee, Swan Boat, and Sauna, each adding a distinctive touch to your space.
Features:
- 100% Cotton – Soft, absorbent, and gentle on the skin
- Compact Size (25cm x 25cm) – Perfect for home use or carrying in a bag
- Retro Japanese Designs – Fun, nostalgic illustrations that stand out
- Great Gift Idea – A thoughtful and practical small gift
Care Instructions:
- Wash before first use
- Wash separately for the first few washes, as slight colour bleeding may occur
- Avoid chlorine bleach
- Use a laundry net when washing for best results
- Some shrinkage may occur after washing
Available in four designs, the Hightide New Retro Hand Towel adds a touch of character to any setting while offering everyday functionality.
A charming hand towel with a nostalgic twist, the Hightide New Retro Hand Towel features playful, three-dimensional retro illustrations inspired by everyday life in Japan. Made from 100% cotton, it offers a soft texture and high absorbency, making it a practical yet stylish addition to any home.
Measuring 25cm x 25cm, this compact towel is ideal for daily use in the kitchen, bathroom, or on the go. The collection includes four unique designs: Gyoza, Coffee, Swan Boat, and Sauna, each adding a distinctive touch to your space.
Features:
- 100% Cotton – Soft, absorbent, and gentle on the skin
- Compact Size (25cm x 25cm) – Perfect for home use or carrying in a bag
- Retro Japanese Designs – Fun, nostalgic illustrations that stand out
- Great Gift Idea – A thoughtful and practical small gift
Care Instructions:
- Wash before first use
- Wash separately for the first few washes, as slight colour bleeding may occur
- Avoid chlorine bleach
- Use a laundry net when washing for best results
- Some shrinkage may occur after washing
Available in four designs, the Hightide New Retro Hand Towel adds a touch of character to any setting while offering everyday functionality.
Delivery & Returns
| Orders £35+ | UK Royal Mail delivery within 5 days, Monday to Friday. Free on orders over £35. | FREE |
| Tracked Delivery 48 |
Royal Mail 48, tracked. Delivery within 48 hours, Monday to Friday. Tracking number provided. |
£3.99 |
| Tracked Delivery 24 |
Royal Mail 24, tracked. Delivery within 24 hours, Monday to Friday. Tracking number provided. |
£4.99 |
| Next Day Delivery | Delivery on the following working day on orders purchased before 12:00pm, 5 days a week. You'll receive a tracking number with updates about the progress of your order. Signature required. |
£7.99 |
| International Delivery |
Shipping costs are calculated automatically at the checkout when both the destination and delivery service are selected. |
Calculated at checkout |
| Customs & Import Charges | In some cases, customs and import duties may be charged as your parcel reaches its destination country. The Journal Shop has no control over these charges and we can't tell you what the cost would be, as they will vary from country to country. Any charges on a parcel must be paid by the person receiving the parcel. | To be paid by customer |
The Journal
The Best Japanese Stationery Gifts for Every Budget (2026)
Japanese stationery makes exceptional gifts for a very specific reason: it looks and feels premium without necessarily costing a premium amount. The design sensibility — precise, thoughtful, beautiful in use rather than in display — translates immediately even to people who don't know anything about stationery brands.
We've curated gifts across every budget, from a first-time MT washi tape haul to a Sailor fountain pen set that will genuinely last a lifetime.
Under £15 — Perfect Starter Gifts
MT Masking Tape Set
MT is the original washi tape maker, and a set of MT tapes is one of the most reliably delightful small gifts in stationery. The MT Basic Colours set gives a range of everyday tones; the pattern and illustration sets go further. They're beautiful, practical, and entirely new to most gift recipients. Expect immediate questions about where they came from.
Who it's for: Journalers, bullet journalers, gift wrappers, anyone who decorates planners or notebooks.
Stalogy Notebook
The Stalogy 365 Days notebook is an elegant, understated gift for anyone who writes. Clean design, excellent paper, flat-lie binding. The kind of notebook that feels more expensive than it is — which, for a gift, is exactly the point.
Who it's for: Writers, journalers, minimalists, anyone starting a new notebook habit.
Pilot Iroshizuku Ink
A single bottle of Pilot Iroshizuku is a perfect gift for any fountain pen user who hasn't tried it. The bottles are beautiful objects in themselves. Pick a colour that suits the recipient — Tsuki-yo for teal lovers, Kon-peki for blue, Yama-budo for something more dramatic.
Who it's for: Fountain pen users of any level.
£15–40 — Considered Gifts
Midori MD Notebook
The Midori MD Notebook is a gift that communicates taste. Minimal cover, exceptional paper, flat-lie binding. Available in A4, A5, A6 and B6 sizes, in blank, lined, and grid. A gift for the writer who already has notebooks but will immediately recognise this one as better.
Who it's for: Writers, fountain pen users, designers, anyone who takes their paper seriously.
Traveler's Company Brass Accessories
Midori's brass accessories — paper clips, bone folders, letter openers — are objects that reward daily use. They're heavy, beautifully made, and the kind of thing people never buy for themselves. Particularly good as a gift alongside a Traveler's Notebook.
Who it's for: Anyone who appreciates craft objects and desk accessories.
Hobonichi Techo Original
The Hobonichi Techo Original with a simple cover makes a beautiful gift for a daily journaler or planner. At around £25–30 for the notebook, it's an accessible entry point to the Hobonichi world. If the recipient is already a Hobonichi user, buy them a new cover instead.
Who it's for: Daily journalers, planner enthusiasts, anyone who already loves Japanese stationery.
£40–80 — Luxury Gifts
Traveler's Notebook Starter Kit
The Traveler's Notebook starter kit — leather cover plus refills — is one of the finest gifts in stationery at any price point. It arrives beautifully packaged, feels luxurious to unwrap, and lasts decades. Available in Regular and Passport sizes, in Camel, Black, and Brown leather.
Who it's for: Travellers, writers, people who want a notebook system they can make their own. An excellent gift for someone who "has everything" in the stationery world — they probably don't have a Traveler's Notebook.
Sailor Pro Gear Slim Fountain Pen
A Sailor fountain pen is a gift that will be used for decades. The Pro Gear Slim is Sailor's most elegant everyday pen — slim, beautifully balanced, with a 14-karat gold nib that writes with extraordinary smoothness. Pair it with a bottle of Sailor Shikiori ink for a complete gift.
Who it's for: Fountain pen enthusiasts, writers, anyone who would appreciate a genuinely lifetime pen.
Gift Wrapping and Presentation
Japanese stationery gifts present beautifully with minimal effort. MT washi tape on plain kraft wrapping paper is itself a statement. A Traveler's Notebook arrived in its original packaging needs no additional wrapping — the packaging is part of the gift.
Browse our full Japanese stationery collection — all UK stock, free delivery over £35. Not sure where to start? Our Japanese stationery brands guide will help.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a good Japanese stationery gift for someone who doesn't know stationery?
MT washi tape is the safest entry-level Japanese stationery gift — it's immediately beautiful, obviously Japanese in design, and has clear practical uses. A Stalogy or MD Paper notebook is another safe bet for anyone who writes at all.
Is a Hobonichi a good gift?
Yes, with one caveat: the recipient should be a daily journaler or planner user who would use one page per day. If they're an occasional writer, the Traveler's Notebook is a more flexible choice.
Do you offer gift wrapping at The Journal Shop?
All Journal Shop orders are carefully packaged. Japanese stationery arrives in its original packaging, which is often beautiful enough to serve as gift presentation itself.
What is the best Japanese stationery gift under £20?
A bottle of Pilot Iroshizuku ink (for fountain pen users), an MT washi tape set (for journalers and crafters), or a Stalogy notebook (for writers) are all excellent options under £20.
The Best Japanese Fountain Pen Inks Available in the UK (2026)
Japanese ink makers approach fountain pen ink the way Japanese craftsmen approach everything: with an obsessive attention to quality, consistency, and aesthetic beauty. The best Japanese inks don't just write well — they behave beautifully in the pen, produce colours of extraordinary depth and character, and have names that are, in themselves, a small act of poetry.
Here are the best Japanese fountain pen inks available in the UK right now, from everyday workhorses to bottles you'll open slowly and savour.
Pilot Iroshizuku
The most celebrated fountain pen ink range in the world. Pilot's Iroshizuku collection — "iroshizuku" translates roughly as "glistening drops of colour" — comprises 24 inks, each named after a Japanese landscape, natural phenomenon, or cultural image. Tsuki-yo (moonlit night) is a teal-green with extraordinary depth. Kon-peki (cerulean sky) is a vivid blue that makes every nib it touches look better. Yama-budo (wild grape) is a deep wine-red that sheens green.
Every Iroshizuku ink is well-behaved in the pen: it flows easily, dries without fuss, and cleans out without drama. They're not just beautiful — they're practical. This combination of everyday reliability and exceptional aesthetics is why Iroshizuku is the standard by which other inks are measured.
The 50ml bottles are beautifully designed and worth owning for their own sake.
Start with: Tsuki-yo (teal), Kon-peki (blue), or Yama-budo (wine-red) depending on your colour preference.
Sailor Shikiori
Sailor's Shikiori collection — "shikiori" means "four seasons weaving" — are seasonal inks that capture the colours of Japanese nature across the year. Spring sakura pinks, summer deep blues, autumn russet-reds, winter pale greys. They're inks that make you feel something when you look at the bottle name before you've even opened it.
Sailor inks are renowned for their exceptional quality and consistency. The Shikiori inks produce beautiful shading — the variation between light and dark on a single stroke — and several exhibit subtle sheening on high-quality paper like Tomoe River or MD Paper.
Start with: Yodaki (a deep autumn teal) or Ama-iro (a serene sky blue), depending on season.
Kyoto Ink (Kyo No Oto)
The Kyo No Oto range captures the traditional colours of Kyoto — the old capital, where Japan's most refined aesthetics were developed over centuries. These are inks named for cultural concepts: Ruri-iro (lapis lazuli colour), Moegi-iro (fresh green), Sakuranezumi (cherry blossom grey). Each one is a story.
The inks themselves are beautifully saturated, shade well on quality paper, and feel appropriately considered — like something designed to be used slowly and deliberately.
Start with: Ruri-iro (a deep blue with purple undertones) or Moegi-iro (a fresh spring green).
Sailor Ink Studio
If Shikiori is Sailor's poetry collection, Ink Studio is their laboratory. Over 100 colours, each numbered rather than named, ranging from straightforward blues and blacks to extraordinary sheening purple-golds and shimmering blue-greens. Ink Studio is for the collector who wants options — or for the writer who has found, through Iroshizuku and Shikiori, that they have a taste for ink hunting.
Many Ink Studio colours exhibit strong sheening and shading on Tomoe River paper. They are not everyday inks — they reward quality paper and intentional use.
A Note on Using Japanese Inks
Japanese inks are generally well-behaved and pen-safe. They clean out easily and don't stain pens. For best results, use them on quality paper — Tomoe River, MD Paper, or LIFE Noble — where their shading and sheening properties can shine. On cheaper papers, many of their most beautiful qualities simply don't appear.
If you're new to fountain pen ink and want to see what all the fuss is about, start with a bottle of Iroshizuku in a colour that appeals to you. Use it in whatever pen you have. Write on whatever paper you have. Then get a Hobonichi Techo or a sheet of fountain pen friendly paper and try it again. The difference will be immediately obvious.
Browse our full range of fountain pen inks and Japanese stationery at The Journal Shop — UK stock, free delivery over £35. See also our Japanese stationery brands guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the most popular Japanese fountain pen ink?
Pilot Iroshizuku is the most widely celebrated Japanese fountain pen ink range. Tsuki-yo (moonlit night teal) is consistently one of the most popular individual inks in the world.
Do Japanese inks work in any fountain pen?
Yes. Japanese fountain pen inks are generally well-behaved and work in any fountain pen. They're water-based, pen-safe, and clean out easily. Iroshizuku in particular is known for its excellent flow properties across all pen types.
What paper shows Japanese fountain pen inks best?
Tomoe River paper (used in Hobonichi notebooks) and MD Paper (used in Midori MD notebooks) show Japanese inks at their best — producing shading, sheening, and colour depth that faster-absorbing papers don't allow.
Are Sailor inks better than Pilot inks?
Both are exceptional and serve different purposes. Pilot Iroshizuku is more practical for everyday use — excellent flow, reliable dry times, easy to clean. Sailor inks (especially Ink Studio) tend to produce more dramatic shading and sheening effects but may be slightly less forgiving in some pens. Many fountain pen users keep both.
What Is Tomoe River Paper? The Complete Guide
If you spend any time in fountain pen communities, you'll encounter Tomoe River paper constantly. People are devoted to it. They seek it out specifically. They buy notebooks precisely because they use it. What is it about one type of paper that inspires such loyalty?
This is the complete guide to Tomoe River paper — what it is, why fountain pen users love it, what its limitations are, and where to buy it in the UK.
What Is Tomoe River Paper?
Tomoe River (巴川製紙所, Tomoe River Paper Co.) is a specialist paper manufacturer based in Shizuoka, Japan. They produce an ultra-thin, ultra-smooth writing paper that has become the most celebrated fountain pen paper in the world.
The defining characteristic is its weight: 52gsm. This is extraordinarily light — roughly half the weight of standard 90gsm notebook paper. Yet despite this, it is remarkably durable and shows minimal bleed-through even with very wet fountain pen inks.
Why Do Fountain Pen Users Love It?
Two reasons: performance and experience.
Performance: Tomoe River absorbs ink slowly, which means ink sits on the surface longer before being absorbed. This produces exceptional colour saturation — inks look deeper, richer, more vivid than on faster-absorbing papers. It also allows ink to shade (show variation between thin and thick strokes), sheen (produce a metallic shimmer as light catches dried ink), and shimmer (show glitter particles in specialty inks) — properties that simply don't appear on thicker, faster-absorbing papers.
Experience: Writing on Tomoe River is unlike writing on any other paper. Fountain pen nibs glide across its surface with almost no resistance — what pen people call "feedback." It's smooth in a way that feels almost uncanny when you first experience it.
The Trade-offs
Tomoe River is not perfect for everyone. Its slow absorption means slow dry times — wet inks can smear if your hand drags across the page while writing. Left-handed writers often struggle with it for this reason. Broad, wet nibs also increase smear risk.
Ghosting — where ink shows faintly on the reverse of the page — can also appear with heavy inks, though full bleed-through is rare. The 2026 Hobonichi editions use updated Tomoe River paper that has improved on earlier ghosting issues.
Where Do You Find Tomoe River Paper?
Tomoe River paper is used in several products available in the UK:
Hobonichi Techo planners — all formats use Tomoe River paper. The most widely available Tomoe River product in the UK.
Yamamoto Paper notebooks — Yamamoto Paper is a specialist paper brand that produces several products using Tomoe River paper, including the RO-BIKI NOTE series. Available at The Journal Shop.
Loose Tomoe River sheets — available in packs of A4 and A5 sheets for those who want to try the paper before committing to a notebook. An excellent way to test it with your inks and pens.
Tomoe River vs MD Paper
The most common comparison. Midori MD Paper is thicker (70–80gsm), cream-toned, and absorbs ink faster. It produces excellent writing results with less smearing and ghosting — a more forgiving paper for everyday use. Tomoe River produces more dramatic ink effects but demands more patience.
For daily writing: MD Paper. For experiencing what your inks can really do: Tomoe River.
Tomoe River vs Life Noble Paper
LIFE Noble paper sits between Tomoe River and standard notebook paper in weight and absorbency. It's exceptionally smooth, produces excellent ink saturation, and has faster dry times than Tomoe River. Many serious fountain pen users prefer it for everyday journaling precisely because it's less demanding. A worthy alternative if Tomoe River's dry times frustrate you.
Should You Try Tomoe River Paper?
If you use a fountain pen, yes — unambiguously yes. Even if you decide it's not your everyday paper, experiencing what your inks look like on Tomoe River at least once is worth it. You will see colours, shading, and sheening you didn't know your inks were capable of.
Start with a Hobonichi Techo or a pack of loose Tomoe River sheets. Write in it with the ink you use most. You'll understand immediately why people make such a fuss about it.
Browse our full Japanese stationery collection and our fountain pen friendly notebooks. For a full guide to Japanese stationery brands, see our complete brands overview.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Tomoe River paper good for ballpoint pens?
Adequate but not ideal. Tomoe River is optimised for fountain pens and fine liquid inks. Ballpoints and rollerballs work fine but won't show the shading and sheen effects the paper is known for. For ballpoint writing, MD Paper or LIFE Noble are better choices.
Why does Tomoe River paper take so long to dry?
Because it absorbs ink slowly — the property that produces its exceptional colour saturation and ink effects. The trade-off is dry time. Using a drier ink, a finer nib, or writing more slowly reduces smearing.
Has Tomoe River paper changed in recent years?
Yes. The original manufacturer updated their formula in recent years, and some products (including the 2026 Hobonichi) use a slightly revised version. The 2026 paper addresses ghosting concerns from earlier editions while maintaining the characteristic smoothness and ink performance.
Where can I buy Tomoe River paper in the UK?
The Journal Shop stocks Hobonichi Techo planners and Yamamoto Paper notebooks using Tomoe River paper, all held in UK stock with free delivery over £35.