Kigami
Trident maple  Kokufu 97th
The Collection · Spring MMXXVI
The Japanese art of bonsai · since 2014

Trees,
patience and time.

A curated collection of bonsai, pots and display pieces — each one a decades-long conversation between the tree and its master.

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“We don't grow small trees — we grow timeon a branch that is learning to wait.”
Kigami · 木紙
The collection

137 living pieces

Every Kigami bonsai has been hand-picked, one by one. They arrive home with their story and their care notes.

Showing 1–12 of 137 pieces
Page 1 of 12
Kigami brand mark

Philosophy

KIGAMI is born from the shared vision of two bonsai enthusiasts who decided to turn their devotion and respect for this discipline into a sustainable project with a philosophy of its own.

What began as a personal need — to create the home that high-end bonsai deserves — is today a space devoted to exceptional pieces: trees with the quality and character to stand in the finest collections and exhibitions, in Japan and beyond.

Our perspective is rooted in the Japanese tradition, where bonsai is not understood as an imposition upon nature but as a prolonged conversation with it. Every detail matters: the selection of the tree, the cultivation and its techniques, the design, the choice of pot, the way the piece is presented.

Our name reflects that intention. KIGAMI joins KI (, tree in Japanese) and KAMI (, deity): a way of expressing the almost reverential respect we hold for every bonsai we offer. KIGAMI is for those who don't simply wish to own a bonsai but to understand it — for those who recognize in every tree a culture, a discipline and a beauty that need little explanation when well tended.

A place where tradition and modernity coexist without noise. Where excellence is not proclaimed. It is perceived.

Team

Sergio Fernández

Sergio Fernández

Sergio grew up in Zamora, in Castilla y León. He played football for years at Zamora CF, an era from which he still carries a deep passion for the game.

Sara Camacho

Sara Camacho

Sara discovered Japanese bonsai through an old illustrated book that belonged to her father — a first encounter that sparked her fascination with this art.