Geta The Best Place Bali — Ceremonial geta · Handmade in Bali, view 1
Geta The Best Place Bali — Ceremonial geta · Handmade in Bali, view 2
Geta The Best Place Bali — Ceremonial geta · Handmade in Bali, view 3
Geta The Best Place Bali — Ceremonial geta · Handmade in Bali, view 4
Geta The Best Place Bali — Ceremonial geta · Handmade in Bali, view 5
Geta The Best Place Bali — Ceremonial geta · Handmade in Bali, view 6

01 / 06

Ceremonial geta · Handmade in Bali

Geta The Best Place Bali

€320

Classical Japanese ceremonial geta, handmade in Bali by Balinese artisans and curated by artists of Kintsugi Gallery. Crafted from wood, lacquer, and paint, these sculptural sandals combine tradition, ritual, and contemporary art. A luxurious statement piece that can be worn with or without socks.

Size

If you are between sizes, choose the larger — the wood does not stretch.

1
Materials+

Wood, lacquer, paint. Handmade by Balinese artisans. Art direction curated by artists of Kintsugi Gallery. Includes a wooden box.

Sizes+
  • S
  • M
  • L

If you are between sizes, choose the larger — the wood does not stretch.

Shipping & returns+

Made to order in Bali. Ships within 14 days of payment. Delivery 7–21 days depending on region. Tracking included. Customs and duties at the buyer's responsibility.

Worldwide shipping. For local pickup in Ubud, please contact us.

14-day return on unworn items.

Care+

Wipe clean with a dry cloth. Once a year, a thin layer of camellia oil on the wood. Do not soak in water.

Made in Bali · Worldwide shipping

The story

Geta The Best Place Bali is not simply footwear. It is a ritual art object created at the intersection of Japanese tradition, Balinese craftsmanship, and the philosophy of kintsugi.

The form is based on classical Japanese ceremonial geta — wooden sandals historically associated with elegance, ritual, dignity, and special occasions. In this edition, the traditional Japanese silhouette is reimagined in Bali, an island known for its artisans, ceremonies, handcraft, and deep relationship with natural materials.

Each pair is handmade by Balinese masters from wood, then finished with lacquer and paint. The artistic direction is curated by artists from Kintsugi Gallery, making every pair feel less like a mass-produced accessory and more like an object with presence, character, and visual force.

These geta are made for those who do not simply want to wear shoes, but to make an entrance. Their architectural shape, wooden structure, lacquered surface, and handcrafted finish turn every step into a small ceremony.

They can be worn both with socks and without — either in a more traditional ceremonial way or as part of a contemporary, expressive look. The geta pair naturally with kimono-inspired clothing, sarongs, linen garments, festival outfits, artistic silhouettes, or minimalist total black styling.