Fox Spirit
Kitsune — The Fox Spirit
The kitsune is a shape-shifting fox of immense intelligence and magical power. Messengers of Inari, they can appear as beautiful humans and are celebrated as both tricksters and divine protectors.
Explore Japanese Supernatural Folklore
Discover the ancient world of yōkai — from the cunning kitsune to the fearsome oni, the proud tengu to the haunting yūrei. Immerse yourself in centuries of Japanese myth, legend, and supernatural tradition.
Who We Are
Solstice Glide is Tokyo's premier resource for authentic Japanese mythology, yōkai research, and spirit folklore. Founded in the heart of Asakusa, we bring together scholars, artists, and enthusiasts devoted to preserving the living tradition of Japan's supernatural world.
From curated study materials and handcrafted artefacts to guided folklore workshops, we exist to connect the modern world with Japan's ancient spiritual imagination.
The Spirit Bestiary
Every yōkai carries a story woven into Japan's cultural memory. Meet the most iconic supernatural beings of the archipelago.
Fox Spirit
The kitsune is a shape-shifting fox of immense intelligence and magical power. Messengers of Inari, they can appear as beautiful humans and are celebrated as both tricksters and divine protectors.
Demon
Towering creatures with wild hair, iron clubs, and vivid skin of red or blue. Oni serve as enforcers of cosmic justice, punishing the wicked in the realm of the dead, yet also ward off evil during Setsubun.
Mountain Spirit
Masters of the mountains, tengu are proud and fierce spirits depicted with wings and long noses. Ancient swordsmen and martial arts teachers, they straddle the boundary between the human and divine realms.
Deep-Dive Lore
The concept of yōkai stretches back to Japan's earliest written records. The Kojiki (712 CE) and Nihon Shoki (720 CE) detail the birth of supernatural beings from the tears of gods and the decay of sacred objects. Every mountain, river, and twisted tree was believed to harbour a spirit.
By the Heian period, a rich visual and literary culture of supernatural beings had developed. Court diaries record encounters with invisible presences, shape-shifters, and demons that wandered the capital's streets after nightfall.
Inquire About WorkshopsParallel to our visible world runs Kakuriyo, the hidden realm inhabited by kami, yōkai, and ancestral spirits. Boundaries between the two realms thin during festivals such as Obon, when the dead return to visit the living.
Sacred sites like Aokigahara Forest and the shores of Lake Suwa are believed to be natural gates between worlds — places where ordinary humans might glimpse or be drawn into the spirit realm.
Inquire About WorkshopsShinto priests developed elaborate ceremonies — harae (purification), misogi (water cleansing), and oharae (great purification) — to maintain harmony between humans and spirits. Ofuda talismans and shimenawa ropes still mark sacred boundaries today.
The annual Setsubun ritual, where roasted beans are thrown to drive away oni, remains practised across Japan every February — a living thread connecting modern life to ancient yōkai tradition.
Inquire About WorkshopsVisual Archive
Centuries of Japanese woodblock prints, scroll paintings, and masks have shaped how we visualise the spirit world.
Through the Ages
712 CE
Japan's oldest chronicle records the creation myth, the birth of kami from primal chaos, and the first supernatural encounters. Yōkai belief is woven into the foundations of Japanese civilisation.
794–1185 CE — Heian Period
Court poets and diarists documented encounters with oni and spirits. The Genji Monogatari features possession by vengeful spirits, establishing yōkai as a serious literary and spiritual subject.
Edo Period (1603–1868)
Ukiyo-e masters such as Utagawa Kuniyoshi and Hokusai produced iconic woodblock prints of supernatural beings. Toriyama Sekien's encyclopaedic Gazu Hyakki Yakō catalogued hundreds of yōkai species.
20th Century
Manga artist Shigeru Mizuki's GeGeGe no Kitarō introduced yōkai to post-war generations, while folklorist Kunio Yanagita's ethnographic work preserved endangered oral traditions for academic study.
Today
From Studio Ghibli films to contemporary festivals, yōkai remain a vital part of Japanese cultural identity — inspiring art, literature, games, and spiritual practice around the world.
"In Japan, the supernatural is not a departure from reality — it is woven into every shadow, every old shrine, every story passed between generations."
Spirit Artefacts
Handcrafted and curated artefacts for collectors, scholars, and those who feel the call of the spirit world. Contact us to order or enquire.
Handcrafted Mask
Hand-painted theatrical Noh mask depicting a fearsome red oni. Crafted from paulownia wood using traditional techniques. Each piece is one-of-a-kind.
¥48,000
Enquire by EmailScroll Painting
Original ink-and-mineral-pigment scroll depicting a nine-tailed kitsune emerging from sacred flames. Signed by master calligrapher Hiroshi Aoki.
¥120,000
Enquire by EmailWood Carving
Intricately carved cypress-wood tengu figure in full ceremonial regalia — feathered wings, long nose, and ceremonial fan. A powerful protective talisman.
¥78,000
Enquire by EmailIllustrated Reference
Our flagship three-volume illustrated encyclopaedia of 420 documented yōkai species. English text, traditional woodblock-style illustrations. Limited to 500 sets.
¥36,000
Enquire by EmailCommon Questions