
At first glance, you might reach for one thinking it's a chunk of amethyst
or a sliver of rose quartz. But look closer — it's a Japanese sweet,
and it's meant to be eaten.
Koubutsu wokashi — literally "mineral confection" — is a form of kohakuto,
a traditional wagashi made from sugar and agar. What makes Harapeco Lab's
version extraordinary is the obsessive attention to recreating the look of
real minerals: the fractured surfaces, the translucent depth, the way light
catches a crystal at different angles. Each piece is hand-cut by artisans
in Fukuoka, and no two are identical.
Harapeco Lab, the Fukuoka-based food art collective behind the brand,
has been crafting こうぶつヲカシ since 2017. They've published a book
on the craft and opened studios in both Fukuoka and Osaka — but every
piece is still made by hand.
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Three Collections

Koubutsu no Kakera
12 flavors including matcha, raspberry, and muscat. Multi-faceted shapes
— diamonds, stars, flowers — presented in a display-worthy box.
Kyushu no Koubutsu Wokashi
Flavors inspired by Kyushu's regional ingredients. Colorful gem-cut shapes
with a strong sense of place — a great starting point.
Yori Koubutsu na Koubutsu Wokashi
The most mineral-like of the three. Cluster formations and rough textures
— almost indistinguishable from real specimens.
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A Souvenir That Doesn't Look Like a Souvenir

Most Japanese omiyage is charming but forgettable. こうぶつヲカシ is
different — it photographs like fine jewelry, ships at room temperature,
and genuinely surprises people who have never seen it before.
It's also a conversation piece about Japanese craft: the kohakuto tradition,
the hand-cutting process, and a small workshop in Fukuoka making something
that has no real equivalent anywhere in the world.
Shop all three collections at FUKUOKA OTAKU — we ship internationally.