Croisée in a Foreign Labyrinth

Croisée in a Foreign Labyrinth (異国迷路のクロワーゼ, Ikoku Meiro no Kurowāze, literally "The Crossroads of a Foreign Maze", titled in French La Croisée dans un Labyrinthe Étranger) is a 2006 – 2011 manga series with a 2011 anime adaptation. The story suffers from Author Existence Failure; Hinata Takeda passed away n 2017.

It's the late 19th century, and Japan has recently emerged from its self-imposed isolation. As the nation starts to take an interest in the wider world, so too does the wider world take interest in Japan.

Paris, France. In the trading emporium Galerie du Roy, there is an iron-crafting shop, Enseignes du Roy. The emporium, and the shops inside, have seen better days.

Enseignes du Roy is currently run by a young man named Claude. His grandfather, Oscar, has recently returned from Japan with an unexpected addition, a young girl called Yune.

Yune doesn't know what to make of France. Claude doesn't know what to make of Yune. They're going to find out together.

Originally a Manga by Hinata Takeda, who was also the illustrator for Gosick, it's been made into an Anime for the summer 2011 season.

There's also a Spin-Off manga, Ikoku Meiro no Alice-chan, spotlighting Alice's adventures with Yune.

"[Oscar enters a room to find Claude and Yune cleaning the floor] Claude: Grandfather! At such a time!! Don't come in! The basement isn't soaked with water! There's nothing to see!"
 * Alliterative Name: Claude Claudel.
 * Animal Motifs: Yune is associated with kittens, due to her innocence and naivete.
 * Apologises a Lot: Yune.
 * Be Careful What You Wish For:
 * Berserk Button: Claude certainly has quite a few.
 * Bilingual Backfire: Claude and Oscar think that Yune can't understand French, so Claude ends up saying some rather callous things in front of her thinking she won't understand.
 * Bishonen: Claude.
 * It might be archetypal in anime to have a Bishounen blond guy named Claude who is awkward around the ladies.
 * Bloodless Carnage: Averted
 * Blue Eyes: Yune is keen to notice Claude's, Alice's, and Camille's blue eyes in the manga and anime adaptation.
 * Boy Meets Girl
 * Bridal Carry: Claude does this briefly to Yune in Chapter 5 when she's missing her geta sandals and later in Chapter 8 when one of her geta sandal straps snap while Claude and she try to escape the crowd.
 * Can't Hold His Liquor: When Oscar slips some red wine in Yune's drink to substitute for sake in Chapter 7 (in the manga) and Episode 11 (in the anime), Yune gets quite sleepy for a bit and talks about her older sister.
 * Childhood Friends: In Chapter 6, it's revealed that Claude and are childhood friends.
 * Childhood Friend Romance:
 * Cool Old Guy: Oscar.
 * Culture Clash: Half the point. Yune does all kinds of things that Claude just can't wrap his mind around
 * Cute Little Fangs: Both Yune and Alice have one, for no particular reason.
 * Dark and Troubled Past:
 * Did Not Do the Research:
 * Lactose intolerance can be fairly common among cultures that don't typically consume dairy products (including Japan), so it might not be that wise to let Yune eat cheese and drink café au lait. Justified, since that fact was little known at the time.
 * In-universe, Alice has quite a few examples with the things she gets from Japan: for example, a chasaku (spoon for scooping matcha), an ink brush, and an usu (bowl for grinding rice flour), which she thought were a hair ornament, a makeup brush, and a water basin respectively. Also justified, since the information about such things was not easily accessible to the public at the time--and most of the items could be used the way she envisions them.
 * Early Animation: In-universe. Oscar and his friends make a performance, a zoetrope and magic lantern show, to impress the neighbors.
 * Family Business: Enseignes du Roy.
 * Fish Out of Water: The central premise.
 * Foreign Queasine:
 * Yune swears she likes cheese and coffee, but it's quite obvious to everyone that the opposite is true.
 * Claude's reaction to Japanese food. He ends up trying to follow Yune's example, though.
 * Foreshadowing:
 * Yune's older sister Shione is mentioned quite a few times before Yune's past with her is revealed.
 * The Grand Magasin is briefly mentioned before it becomes a plot point in Chapter 7 and Chapter 8.
 * Gratuitous English: In the second episode, when Yune's asking the names of vegetables, Claude answers with their English names rather than French names. It's hard to tell though whether or not that's just because modern Japanese uses the English word anyway.
 * Gratuitous French: For the most part justified, since after all they're in France. Every once in a while a French word is slipped into the conversation when there's a perfectly good Japanese word for it, though--for example, "Japonaise" in the first episode.
 * Hair-Trigger Temper: Claude.
 * Hot-Blooded:
 * Claude. He has a tendency to get mad at Yune a lot if she does things that he doesn't understand or he finds offense to, but once he cools down, he realizes his error and apologizes.
 * Yune herself also tends to get really stubborn about things, and is not easily swayed in that mode.
 * Huge Guy, Tiny Girl: It's not that the men are big. It's that Yune's so small. Japanese people are typically a bit shorter than Europeans (Oscar says he felt a bit like a giant when he was in Japan), but Yune is still exceptionally small.
 * Ill Girl:
 * I'm Taking Her Home with Me: Alice to Yune.
 * Jerk with a Heart of Gold: Claude
 * Kawaisa: Yune might cause some kawaii overload with some viewers.
 * Kimono Is Traditional: Yune wears nothing but kimono.
 * Meaningful Name: Yune means "the sound of hot water." Her older sister Shione's name means "the sound of an ebbing tide."
 * Memento MacGuffin: Yune's late mother's kimono.
 * Mood Whiplash: There's a lot in this series, but notably Chapter 8.
 * My Greatest Failure:
 * No Communities Were Harmed: Galerie Du Roy, as seen in the series, appears to be based on Galerie Du Roi in Brussels.
 * Occidental Otaku: Alice is obsessed with Japan, eagerly collecting any Japanese memorabilia she can. She doesn't know what half of it is, though.
 * Oh Crap: In the first episode/chapter, Yune's sleeve catches on a butterfly piece designed by Claude's father before he died. It smashes to the floor and everyone freezes. Claude is... disappointed, going as far as saying to Yune that she should go back to Japan. At the time, however,
 * Ojou: Alice and Camille.
 * Older Than They Look: Yune is thirteen years old. Claude thought she was ten.
 * Parental Abandonment: Yune's mother is dead and her father isn't mentioned; Claude's father is dead and his mother
 * Pet the Dog:
 * Phenotype Stereotype: Almost all of the French characters are blond-haired with blue or green eyes.
 * Pimped-Out Dress: Yune's kimonos often fall under this, but the one she is introduced in takes the cake.
 * Also Alice and Camile's dresses.
 * Plucky Girl: Yune. To Determinator levels in Chapter 8 when
 * Predatory Business, Corrupt Corporate Executive: The ridiculously pecunious Blanche family. They basically own Paris. Even Alice is entitled to some (of the smaller) business properties, one of which being Enseignes du Roy. In-universe, no one likes them, especially Claude. Still, fans adore Alice like she's the purest Moe in the world.
 * Princess Curls: Alice.
 * The Promise:
 * Claude promising Yune that he will become someone worthy of her trust, and Yune promising Claude that she'll never let go of anything dear to her again.
 * As children, asks Claude to promise that he'll still come and play with her, even if she gets married.
 * Proper Lady: Camile
 * Rapunzel Hair: Camile
 * Real Place Background: Paris is depicted rather faithfully, except for the Galerie itself, which is based on one in Brussels.
 * Rich Bitch: Alice, although she's leaning towards the "with a heart of gold" variety.
 * Scenery Porn: The opening is just a sample of it.
 * Sick Episode: Chapter 4 in the manga, Episode 7 in the anime.
 * Slice of Life
 * Spiritual Successor: To Aria.
 * Stepford Smiler: Both Yune and Camille have their moments.
 * Street Urchin: There is one in particular whose given emphasis on occasionally.
 * Super-Deformed: In Ikoku Meiro no Alice-chan, everyone is depicted this way. Also happens on occasion in the anime.
 * Surprisingly Good French: The opening narration from Episode 2 and onward, also the title of the episodes are all said in French.
 * Suspiciously Specific Denial: Hilariously in Chapter 3.
 * Suspiciously Specific Denial: Hilariously in Chapter 3.


 * Tragic Keepsake:
 * Translation Convention: Both French and Japanese are rendered as Japanese. This is... confusing, to say the least, at least in the first episode (since Yune responds to Japanese and not French).
 * Tsundere: Claude has his moments.
 * Yamato Nadeshiko: Yune, often in ways that Claude really can't understand. Also, Yune's older sister Shione.
 * Yonkoma: Ikoku Meiro no Alice-chan is pretty much this, though it's usually one large panel and four smaller ones per page.