The Science of Tatami Scent: What Research Says About Igusa

The Science of Tatami Scent: What Research Says About Igusa

The Science of Tatami: What's Actually Been Measured About Igusa's Scent

If you've ever stepped into a tatami room and felt your shoulders drop a little, scent may be part of the experience. The grassy, faintly sweet smell of tatami comes from igusa, or Japanese rush, and a small but real body of research has examined how its volatile compounds affect the nervous system. It fits naturally into today's broader interest in natural materials, slow living, and Japanese-inspired interiors — and it's the material behind our tatami line, the flagship collection at Heiwa Slipper (alongside our denim and upcycled lines, which are their own story).

tatami

What Is Igusa?

Igusa is a wetland rush plant that's been woven into Japanese flooring for over a thousand years. It's dried and pressed into tatami mats, and the same dried material is woven into other objects — mats, sandals, and the soles of our tatami-line slippers. As it dries, it releases a set of aromatic compounds that give tatami its characteristic smell.

What the Research Actually Shows

A lot of what circulates online about tatami and igusa rounds up small findings into bigger claims than the data supports. Here's what's actually been published.

The scent's chemistry is documented. A 2010 study in Bioscience, Biotechnology, and Biochemistry used gas chromatography and aroma extract dilution analysis on mat rush and revealed 51 odor-active peaks, of which 12 were judged to be the most important contributors to igusa's characteristic aroma. Eleven of those key odorants were identified or tentatively identified, including vanillin, the same compound found in vanilla.

A 2022 study involving researchers at Kyushu University found a genuinely interesting, counterintuitive result. Twenty healthy university-student participants were exposed to air scented with 15g or 30g of dried igusa (against a control), while researchers measured EEG activity, autonomic nervous activity, blood pressure, and subjective responses. Participants described the scent as sour, pungent, and not pleasant, and blood pressure and pulse rate didn't differ significantly. But even though participants did not rate the scent positively, their alpha wave amplitude and parasympathetic nervous activity — both markers associated with a relaxed state — increased, and the effect was stronger at the lower concentration. In other words, the physiological response didn't match people's subjective opinion of the smell — a more interesting, and more credible, finding than "everyone finds it pleasant and calming."

Research summarized by Kumamoto's igusa producers' cooperative reports that domestic igusa mats were associated with greater alpha-wave activity and higher measured sleep efficiency than synthetic flooring. The cooperative states this research involved Kyushu University and received support from Japan's NARO Bio-oriented Technology Research Advancement Institution, though the page itself doesn't provide a full peer-reviewed citation.

Worth sizing correctly: these are small studies, and "increased alpha wave amplitude" is a physiological marker of relaxation, not a clinical outcome. We'd rather undersell this than overclaim it.

Beyond Scent: Other Measured Properties of Igusa

Separate from the scent research, igusa's sponge-like internal structure has more straightforward, physically testable properties. Industry testing has reported adsorption of substances including formaldehyde and nitrogen dioxide, and the same structure absorbs excess humidity and releases it as air dries. Laboratory and industry materials also report growth-inhibiting activity against several common microorganisms. It's worth noting this testing comes from an industry cooperative's own materials rather than an independent peer-reviewed journal, so we'd treat it as good-faith industry data rather than academic-grade evidence.

Where Our Tatami Line Fits In

Most people outside Japan don't have a tatami room, and installing one isn't realistic for a rented apartment. Our tatami line was built around that gap: genuine dried igusa woven into the sole, not a printed pattern or synthetic substitute. Because it sits directly under your feet, you can experience the texture, breathability, and natural scent of genuine woven igusa in an everyday form. Igusa as a material has demonstrated moisture-regulating and antimicrobial characteristics in laboratory and industry testing, though those studies weren't conducted specifically on our slippers — we'd rather be upfront about that than imply otherwise.

The 2022 study described above found measurable physiological responses to VOCs from dried igusa even when participants didn't rate the scent positively. That doesn't establish a specific effect from wearing igusa slippers day to day, but it adds a genuinely interesting scientific dimension to a familiar natural material — and it's also why tatami-line slippers smell faintly grassy straight out of the box. That's the plant, not an additive.

Caring for Igusa

Think of it as a natural woven material rather than technical footwear: keep it dry, let it air out naturally between wears, and avoid prolonged direct sunlight, which helps preserve color. The scent is strongest in the first few months and mellows as the aromatic compounds gradually release — that's expected, not a sign of wear. A little care this way helps the slippers stay in good condition longer.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does the igusa scent fade over time? Yes, gradually, as the volatile compounds slowly release. This is normal and doesn't indicate the material is deteriorating.

What can the research reasonably tell us? That igusa's aroma compounds are chemically documented, and that in at least one small, controlled study, exposure to them produced measurable relaxation-associated changes in brain activity and the nervous system — even among people who didn't like the smell. It doesn't tell us that igusa cures anything, or that wearing igusa slippers reproduces the same effect as a lab-controlled scent exposure. We think that distinction matters more than a bigger claim would.

The Takeaway

The research on igusa's scent is real, peer-reviewed, and more interesting than marketing shorthand suggests — including the detail that people don't have to like the smell for it to show up in their brain waves. Combined with igusa's separately documented material properties, it's a material with a genuine, modest evidence base, applied here in a form you can actually wear.

[Explore Heiwa Slipper's tatami line →]


Sources referenced for this article:

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Hoe is de pantoffel zo populair geworden in Japan? | Wat is de Heiwa-pantoffel?

Wat is Heiwa Slipper?

In het begin, Japanse pantoffels

Bedankt voor uw bezoek aan onze website. Wij zijn een online pantoffelwinkel in Japan en we zijn erg blij u onze verschillende pantoffelcollecties te kunnen voorstellen.

Maar laat me eerst uitleggen wat we in Japan "slipper" noemen. In westerse landen betekent "slipper" meestal "een halfgesloten schoen, bestaande uit een zool die aan de voet van de drager wordt vastgehouden door een bandje dat over (of tussen) de tenen of wreef loopt (Referentie: Wikipedia)". Het zijn draagbare schoenen voor buiten, meestal, en soms ook voor binnen voor comfort. Aan de andere kant denken we in Japan, als we "slipper" zeggen, aan platte, in-house schoenen, en dat is het soort dat we graag aan de wereld willen laten zien.

Zoals je misschien weet, is het gebruikelijk om onze schoenen uit te trekken als we naar binnen gaan om de vloer schoon te houden. Waarom dragen we dan pantoffels in huis? Hoe is de pantoffel zo populair geworden in Japan?

Hoe is de pantoffel zo populair geworden in Japan?

Er wordt gezegd dat de oorsprong van de pantoffel in Japan voor het eerst opdook aan het begin van de Meiji-periode (1968-1912), de tijd dat Japan zijn land openstelde voor de wereld en meer mensen van buitenaf, vooral uit westerse landen, ontving. Deze bezoekers liepen echter natuurlijk direct de huizen of hotelkamers binnen zonder hun schoenen uit te trekken. Japanners vreesden dat de vloer uiteindelijk vies zou worden en de tatami beschadigd zou raken. De pantoffel werd ontworpen om deze problemen op te lossen en mensen met een andere culturele achtergrond te verwelkomen.

Ons thema is “Terugkeer van Japanse pantoffels”

Sindsdien zijn pantoffels een alledaags gebruiksvoorwerp geworden in heel Japan. Helaas vinden we tegenwoordig nauwelijks pantoffels die in Japan zijn gemaakt. Veel ervan worden in andere landen industrieel massaal geproduceerd, tegen lagere lonen, en hier voor een lage prijs verkocht. Ons thema is "De terugkeer van Japanse pantoffels".

Wij geloven dat de pantoffel een brug naar vrede kan zijn (= “Heiwa”)

Hier introduceren we pantoffels die gemaakt zijn met de geest van Japanse gastvrijheid. We willen ook graag een aantal pantoffels introduceren die in andere landen zijn gemaakt, waar we bij de import ons best doen om fairtrade te bereiken. "Voordelen voor alle drie de partijen: voor de klant, de maatschappij en de verkoper", dat is waar we naar streven.

Wij geloven dat de pantoffel een brug naar vrede (= “Heiwa”) kan zijn.

- Heiwa Slipper

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