
There is a moment when lacquer and shell become something that has no modern name for it.
Najeonchilgi — the art of embedding mother-of-pearl into deep lacquer — is one of Korea's most demanding traditional crafts, perfected over centuries of the Goryeo and Joseon periods. The intricate floral patterns on this notebook's cover pay homage to that painstaking tradition: printed at high resolution against a lacquer-dark background, the iridescent shimmer captured here is a quiet echo of the original. Silver foil edges the pages with fine precision. A red thread bookmark, knotted in the Korean tradition, waits inside. The bilingual inside cover explains the history of Najeonchilgi to those discovering Korean heritage for the first time. This is Korean cultural heritage made portable.
Place it in a gift box for someone returning to Korea — the silver-edged pages make every opening feel ceremonial. Use it as a desk object in a minimal studio, where the dark cover and metallic glimmer read as design, not decoration. Present it at a cultural gathering or dinner table, where its quiet story becomes part of the conversation.
Packaged in a sleek black box with silver foil detail — no wrapping required. Handcrafted in South Korea. The silver foil page edges are applied by hand, and the traditional knot bookmark is tied one at a time.