Japan’s Good Design Award—often called the “G Mark”—honors products that make everyday life better through thoughtful, human-centered design. From tools you reach for without thinking to objects that quietly brighten your routine, the award celebrates function, beauty, and care in equal measure. If you’d like to explore the award’s philosophy and categories, the official site offers a calm, comprehensive overview.
This year’s winners include a delightful range of stationery and desk-side tools—pieces that open smoothly, erase cleanly, glide across paper, or simply make work and study feel lighter. Below, we’ve gathered the stationery-related highlights in one place.

Selected among the Good Design Best 100, KOKUYO’s Research Lab Pen was developed from feedback by scientific researchers. Designed for laboratory use, it writes clearly even on wet, frozen, or condensation-covered surfaces, and resists fading when exposed to alcohol. The fine 0.6 mm tip allows precise labeling on small containers like microtubes—an outstanding example of design born directly from user insight.


Opens wide and stands on its own. A special core structure increases rebound so the mouth stays open, making it easy to see and access what’s inside. Two types—gadget and travel—are tailored to different carry needs.


A cleverly designed eraser with a parallelogram cross-section for better grip and aim. It erases cleanly while resisting breakage—small detail, big difference. You can choose from two types: "rectangle" and "parallelogram." It fits according to how you hold it or the area you want to erase, so you can target and erase both wide surfaces and fine details.

A minimalist mechanical pencil tuned for balance and comfort: grippy rubber coating, anti-roll hex ring, and satisfying weight for steady, elegant writing.




A writing series that lets your thoughts show in the line itself—line width can change with pressure (fine liner), while the rollerball’s ink reveals gentle shading. Great for planning phases that benefit from bold strokes and sketch-style thinking.

A dual-ended highlighter designed to draw straight, clean lines with quick-dry ink, helping students mark neatly without smudging notes or textbooks.

An easier, smoother way to label fabrics and school supplies. The optimized tip reduces snagging on cloth, while the new ink minimizes bleed and fading—even on plastic and glass.

A liquid-ink brush-tip board marker for whiteboards and blackboards. Flexible tip captures strokes like tome/hane/harai (stops, flicks, and sweeps), ideal for menus and expressive lettering; wipes away with water.

A tidy study companion: erasable highlighting that doesn’t smear printed text or ballpoint ink, with minimal show-through—perfect for revisiting what truly matters.

Crayons made for grown-up expression: layer light over dark, blend like paint, and build depth that feels almost oil-paint rich. A gentle invitation to rediscover drawing.

A 15 cm ruler with an integrated magnifier (about 1.5×) and subtle guide lines that let you read one line of small text at a time—easier on the eyes, calmer on the mind.

A portable craft pad that opens flat and tears out cleanly. Cut, fold, and sketch wherever inspiration lands.

Transforms from a slim, pen-shaped form into a sturdy book clip via rotating twin jaws—simple to carry, satisfying to use.

An educational set: blacklight, book, and stickers. Hide “fossils,” search by light, then place your discoveries back into the book—hands-on science that sparks conversation.

Traditional origami meets special tactile printing. Texture adds new joy to folding and broadens who can enjoy paper craft.

Blades are angled slightly relative to the handle so both right-handed and left-handed users can cut comfortably—one design, equal experience.

Scissors and opener in one tool for all kinds of packages and materials. A built-in magnet lets you park it on a fridge or entry door for quick access.

Ceramic-blade opener with label-remover, magnet storage, and even a door-scope cover shape. Replaceable blades keep it going longer.

Three jobs in one: open, resize, and break down boxes (plus milk cartons). The ceramic blade resists rust; magnet back for easy storage.

A robust, glove-friendly stapler designed for work sites and outdoor use—durable structure with an elastomer cover for grip and shock resistance.

A new, squeezable take on Yamato paste: a soft bottle with a special perforated tip so even small hands can spread adhesive easily. Pastel blue body, classic yellow cap—nostalgic, but fresh.
Full list is available at Good Design Award homepage.

Designed for expressive, layered color with a soft, paint-like glide, Art Crayon turns quick sketches and journal accents into something richly textured. It’s easy to blend, satisfying to layer, and endlessly inviting for mindful doodles or full-blown illustrations, now available at ZenPop Stationery Store.

Clean lines, quick-dry ink, and a tip that helps you guide straight strokes—KIRE-NA keeps notes tidy and textbooks smudge-free. If you love color-coding, this feels wonderfully precise and calm in hand, also available at ZenPop Stationery Store.
Awards like the Good Design Award remind us that good tools do more than “work.” They stand open when you need them to, erase without fuss, catch the light just right, and make writing or studying feel almost soothing. If one of these winners speaks to you, let it find a place in your routine. Small details, big comfort—that’s the quiet magic of stationery.