RAIL EUROPE REVEALS FIVE TRAIN JOURNEYS TO DISCOVER CENTURIES-OLD CRAFTS STILL ALIVE TODAY
Some of Europe’s most memorable travel experiences are not found in its capitals, headline museums or most photographed landmarks. They survive in smaller towns, quiet workshops and local communities where craft is still part of everyday life.
Ready to experience them for yourself? Take the train! Across Europe, rail makes it possible to move beyond the obvious routes and reach places where materials, landscape and identity are still closely linked: clay shaped by hand, blades forged with precision, glass transformed by fire, wool connected to the North Sea coast and ancient goldsmithing techniques reimagined in a modern city.
As the global platform for booking European train travel, Rail Europe has selected five destinations where travellers can discover Europe’s living heritage first-hand. These journeys are not just about getting from one place to another. They are about slowing down, looking more closely and meeting the people who continue to keep some of Europe’s oldest skills alive.
Faenza, Italy: the city that gave its name to European ceramics
In the heart of Emilia-Romagna, Faenza has been associated with ceramics for centuries. Its name even gave rise to the word “faience”, used internationally to describe a type of glazed earthenware.
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Today, the city remains one of Europe’s great ceramic centres, home to the International Museum of Ceramics and a network of workshops, studios and schools where traditional techniques continue to evolve. For travellers, Faenza offers the chance to discover a city where craft is not simply preserved behind glass, but still shapes its streets, workshops and cultural life.
Faenza can be reached by rail via Bologna, making it a natural stop for travellers exploring northern Italy beyond the classic Venice–Florence–Rome route.
Thiers, France: the blade-making capital of France
Set in the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region, Thiers has been known for knife-making since the Middle Ages. For centuries, its steep streets, river valleys and workshops have been linked to the production of blades, with generations of artisans refining the skills needed to forge, polish and assemble knives.
Today, visitors can explore this heritage through the Musée de la Coutellerie, historic workshops and local makers who continue to work with traditional know-how. Thiers is a strong reminder that craftsmanship is not always delicate or decorative. Sometimes it is industrial, physical and deeply rooted in the working identity of a place.
Thiers can be reached by train via Clermont-Ferrand, offering travellers a slower, more local way to explore central France and its artisan traditions.
Nový Bor, Czech Republic: the glassmaking town where fire becomes art
In northern Czechia, Nový Bor has long been associated with Bohemian glassmaking, one of Europe’s most admired craft traditions. The region’s glassmakers are known for their technical precision, decorative skill and ability to turn molten glass into objects of remarkable delicacy.
Visitors can explore the town’s glass museum, workshops and nearby glassmaking communities, where the craft remains both a cultural legacy and a contemporary creative industry. Watching glass being blown, cut or engraved offers a rare insight into a process that depends on heat, timing, patience and extraordinary manual control.
Nový Bor is accessible by rail from Prague, making it a compelling detour for travellers who want to go beyond the capital and discover one of Czechia’s most distinctive cultural landscapes.
Tönning, Germany: wool, natural fibres and North Sea craftsmanship
On the coast of Schleswig-Holstein, Tönning offers a more intimate and contemporary craft story, shaped by wool, natural fibres and the landscape of northern Germany. Here, Friesenfaser works with materials connected to Nordfriesland, transforming them into pieces for the home and everyday life, from wool blankets to textile products and objects made with natural materials.
This is not a large museum experience. It is closer, quieter and more rooted in place: a living craft project connected to the rhythm of the coast, local materials and a slower way of making. At a time when many travellers are looking for places that feel less crowded and more personal, Tönning offers a discreet but characterful stop where craft is not presented as nostalgia, but as a contemporary way of keeping the relationship between raw material, landscape and community alive.
Tönning can be reached by train via Husum, making it an interesting stop for travellers looking to explore northern Germany beyond the better-known routes.
Barcelona, Spain: ancient goldsmithing hidden in one of Europe’s most visited cities
Barcelona is one of Europe’s most visited cities, but even here, in a place many travellers think they already know, there are still stories, workshops and skills that remain largely unseen. Beyond the modernist architecture, beaches and food scene, the city also holds a quieter craft tradition linked to ancient techniques and a slower, more precise way of working by hand.
One example is artisan and designer Assumpta Bou, who reinterprets goldsmithing techniques with Etruscan roots through contemporary handmade jewellery. In her Barcelona workshop, visitors can discover how these ancient methods are still used today, from the handling of metals to the patient, manual processes behind each piece. Her work connects the ancient world with modern design, showing that some of Europe’s oldest skills do not belong only in museums.
Through her workshops and studio experience, visitors can discover a more intimate side of Barcelona: a city where craft is not a souvenir or a decorative afterthought, but knowledge, time and discipline. Barcelona is one of Europe’s best-connected rail cities, with domestic and international services linking it to destinations across Spain and beyond.
For travellers looking for more meaningful journeys, these destinations offer a different way to experience Europe. They invite visitors to look beyond the obvious, spend more time in smaller places and connect with the skills, materials and traditions that continue to shape local culture.
By making it easier to plan and book rail travel across Europe, Rail Europe helps travellers connect not only cities and countries, but also stories, communities and forms