This photo, taken by Yasaka Marico, shows the scale of Tatsumi's collection.
This photo, taken by Yasaka Marico, shows the scale of Tatsumi’s collection. All photos courtesy of Japanese Tip

We’ve all fiddled with our chopstick wrappers when eating out at an Asian restaurant. Creating a chopstick stand is common; folding the paper wrapper into a crane is a bit more advanced. In Japan, the practice is particularly widespread. So much so that six years ago, Yuki Tatsumi began collecting the little origami sculptures left behind, and now has around 15,000.

A multicolored heart shows off the maker's skill.
A multicolored heart shows off the maker’s skill.

The massive project had a humble beginning. “My interest in collecting started when I was studying at university and working part-time at a restaurant,” says Tatsumi, who is now 27. As a “poor, hungry student,” he found clearing tables tedious. But one day, he picked up a tiny paper circle fashioned by a customer. It had been “transformed into a work of art,” Tatsumi says, and he was so struck by it that he slipped it into his pocket. He started keeping an eye out for chopstick wrapper origami and picking them off tabletops.

A tiny origami ship sets sail.
A tiny origami ship sets sail.

Soon, it became a passion. Tipping isn’t a common practice in Japan, but Tatsumi came to consider the tiny works of art as a symbol of appreciation from diners. “What I once considered trash had now become a treasure, a tip from the customer!” he says, adding that many Japanese people are taught origami as children. Keeping an eye out for the little sculptures made his job more enjoyable, and his collection grew to the point that he decided to go all-in. He called the project Japanese Tip, and traveled around Japan collecting chopstick-wrapper origami from restaurants. Some restaurateurs, Tatsumi told one news network, were befuddled that he wanted something destined for the trash. Yet in a year and a half, he collected 13,000 pieces. He’s still gathering them today, and currently has “about 15,000.”

<em>Japanese Tip</em> is now a travelling exhibition.
Japanese Tip is now a travelling exhibition.

Some of the pieces he’s gathered appear on his website. The designs range from flowers to dogs to geometric shapes: anything that can be created with a long, thin paper wrapper. “There are many birds,” Tatsumi says. Colors range from simple white to vibrant yellow, with some pieces carefully folded to highlight lettering or the wrapper’s printed design. Some are crude, while others have an elegance that belies their humble origins.

An exquisite fan from a Shimane snack bar.
An exquisite fan from a Shimane snack bar.

When hundreds of chopstick-wrapper origami are displayed together, the effect is extraordinary. While he is currently working in an aged-care facility in Kyoto, Tatsumi has started exhibiting the collection in Japan, with pieces pinned against white walls like so many colorful butterflies. In September 2018, Japanese Tip will leave the country for the first time and appear in South Korea. So there’s plenty of time to practice your chopstick-wrapper origami skills if Japanese Tip comes to a city near you.

A pink and red wrapper becomes a shrimp.
A pink and red wrapper becomes a shrimp.
A zombie (or perhaps a dancing man) from Fukuoka.
A zombie (or perhaps a dancing man) from Fukuoka.
An elegant bowtie from a Hokkaido restaurant.
An elegant bowtie from a Hokkaido restaurant.
This circular piece came from an izakaya in Aomori.
This circular piece came from an izakaya in Aomori.

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