This is the Japanese Model No. 1 telephone booth which was introduced in Meiji 33 (1900).

The unpainted orange prototype will be sent off for casting; the painted example is from a different printer and isn't printed as finely but it work as a rough example.
I chose to recreate this model phone booth because it?s distinctive and you can recreate streets from the Meiji, Taisho and early Showa eras. Initially painted white, red booths began appearing in Meiji 44 (1911). A newer style of slim, light grey booth began supplanting the older ones in Showa 2 (1927).
According to the NTT Museum in Mojiko, Kitakyushu, Fukuoka Prefecture, local calls were an expensive 15 sen for five minutes in Meiji 33 (1900). A yen was like a dollar and not a penny back then, so a yen was made of 100 sen. The new ?jido-denwa? or ?automatic telephone? was so popular that by Meiji 35 (1902) the price dropped to five sen. Even if not being used for calls, they were great places for getting out of the rain!
(I?m using the Japanese Imperial calendar dates to give a feel for the era.)





A replica or rebuilt phone booth at Meiji-mura beside the preserved Shichijo koban police box.