Fuji The Sacred Mountain.
138.7274° E
The lowest summit in the Series. By every measure of cultural weight, the heaviest. Frame N° 05 is the disciple's frame — the simplest silhouette, hand-finished hinoki wood inlay, restraint as method.
The master who removes everything that is not the work.
A pilgrimage
repeated.
Fuji is the lowest summit in the Series. It is also the most precisely symmetrical mountain on Earth — a near-perfect stratovolcanic cone that has defined Japanese visual culture for over a thousand years. More than 300,000 climbers reach the summit each year. The mountain has not changed. The path has not changed. Only the climber changes.
Frame N° 05
Fuji.
FRAME SPECIFICATIONS View specifications
· DIMENSIONS
· MATERIAL
· MARKS
· ENGRAVING
The inner temple of every Frame N° 05 carries: 35.3606° N, 138.7274° E. Fujisan. 富士山. The sacred one.
Fuji has been climbed by humans for over thirteen hundred years. The first recorded ascent was in 663 AD by an anonymous monk. By the Edo period, religious pilgrimage groups called Fuji-kō organized mass climbs to the summit — tens of thousands of people a year, ascending at night to reach the top at sunrise. The tradition continues today. Climbers still leave at midnight to summit at dawn. The Japanese have a word for the experience of seeing the sun rise from Fuji's summit: goraikō — the honorable coming of the light.
The mountain is sacred in three religions simultaneously — Shinto, Buddhist, and the indigenous mountain-worship traditions that predate both. Women were forbidden from climbing it until 1872. The first foreigner to summit was Sir Rutherford Alcock, the British consul, in 1860 — escorted by armed samurai for protection.
Fuji is also the most-climbed mountain in the world. Three hundred thousand people summit it every year. Yet the discipline of shokunin — the lifelong devotion to a craft — was born in mountains like this. The frame is built the same way. By hand. Slowly. With patience.
The Shokunin mark — 職人.
FIELD JOURNAL Read field journal
The lowest summit.
The heaviest mountain.
Three thousand seven hundred and seventy-six metres.
The lowest summit in the Series. By every measure of cultural weight, the heaviest. Fuji is not climbed for difficulty. It is climbed for reasons that don't translate.
Discipline. Pilgrimage. The repetition of the same path, by hundreds of thousands of people, for over a thousand years. The mountain has been painted ten thousand times. The mountain has not changed.
Frame N° 05 was built for that idea. The simplest silhouette in the Series — a slim rectangular pantos. Hinoki wood inlay on the inner temple, hand-finished by a single craftsman. No flourishes. No excess.
Hinoki — 檜 — is the sacred cypress used in shrines and tea houses. It is not chosen for performance. It is chosen because it is the material that belongs to this mountain.
Shokunin: the master who removes everything that is not the work.
The frame is
the key.
Every Fuji frame ships with a unique Altitude Code etched on the inner temple. Activate it inside Basecamp and unlock lifetime Elite access — built into the frame, not a subscription.
- Lifetime Elite tier in Basecamp
- Access to the Atlas — global ascent record
- Eligibility for the Fuji Challenge · Pilgrimage path
- Priority allocation on all future drops
- Shokunin mark · Frame N° 05 lineage
Request Frame
N° 05.
First access. Limited allocation. Fuji · 111 numbered.