User 01 | Manga artist, Fujiwara Aoko

Manga artist. In 2006, his work "Where. Where. " won the Kawaguchi Kaiji Award at the 21st MANGA OPEN (Kodansha). The following year, in 2007, his work "Colors" was selected in the general category at the 52nd Chiba Tetsuya Award (Kodansha). In 2008, his work "After the Dream" won an honorable mention at the 65th Newcomer Comics Awards (Shogakukan). His representative works include "Design no Iroha" (Morning Two/2010) and "The Serious Princess and the Stationery Prince" (Monthly Spirits/2020).

The subject is the most familiar tools.
Even in this age of digitalization, like many manga artists, stationery remains an indispensable companion to Fujiwara.
I thought it would be interesting to take a different perspective and delve deeper into these everyday work tools, so from among several candidates, I chose stationery as the theme for the series, and thus "The Serious Princess and the Stationery Prince" was born.
I am fascinated by the stories behind tools.
For example, in an episode on the theme of pencils, while researching how pencils became popular in Japan, students learned about the origins of elementary schools and discovered that the transition from writing brushes to hard pens was related to alphabet education.
The results of this spirit of inquiry can be experienced by readers through the perspective of Kanoko, the main character of "The Serious Princess and the Stationery Prince."

The dialogue for manga is handwritten in a notebook. Typed text makes it easy to rearrange, but it doesn't leave behind the original ideas or the process of trial and error.
A pen-pal network that makes wonderful use of fountain pens.
A pen pal network is an initiative in which people exchange five letters at first, and if they hit it off, they exchange personal information and find friends to send letters and postcards to at seasonal turning points, such as Christmas cards and New Year's cards.
Apparently many fountain pen enthusiasts attend the event, which is not just a place to collect fountain pens and engage in nerdy discussions about them, but also a place where they can actually use the items as tools.

Here are some thoughts from readers: They say that handwritten letters bring them great joy because they convey a lot of information through the paper, the writing implement used, and the handwriting.
This is communication where the purpose is to write, without rushing for a reply.
