Some of the SF Pen Posse were featured in a Japanese TV show that did a segment on Nakaya.
Enjoy.
Some of the SF Pen Posse were featured in a Japanese TV show that did a segment on Nakaya.
Enjoy.
catbert (September 2nd, 2019), ethernautrix (April 30th, 2013), fountainpagan (September 9th, 2019), junglejim (September 2nd, 2019), SIR (September 2nd, 2019), UK Mike (May 7th, 2013)
0:45-1:05 - I sincerely hope that was a stunt double and not Lord Windemere that S.F. "Iron Chef" was waving around.
What a fate - turned into Seafood bisque and served in a hollowed out bread roll
Knowing Japanese would help a lot "Made in Japan" was the only English phrase I heard.
The pen making from 11mins looked interesting. Fascinating to see the hand tooled threads being applied with four starting points or spirals.
It was also amusing with the Japanese language overdubs. Or do most San Franciscans speak Japanese now ?
sinistral hypergraphica - a slurry of ink
"Nothing means less than zero"
We were all dubbed. It was funny to hear our dubbed voices and compare them to our normal voices. They even dubbed Ethernautrix's giggle.
Unfortunately, only a small part of our Pen Posse at Peter's made it into the final cut.
The funniest parts were where they dubbed in the ooohs when the camera shot something made in Japan. However I still can't get over the way they cut those multiple treads into the pen barrel. I wonder if the cap is done the same way or it is only a single screw thread.
sinistral hypergraphica - a slurry of ink
"Nothing means less than zero"
I love that video so much !!!
Watched it at least 5 times now...
The funniest parts were reading the google translated captions:
"I was interested in the underwear of 3 children..." wuh-what..?
I liked the bit at the end with the two craftsmen watching the video. You could see they were a bit embarrassed, but also really proud.
"What are moon-letters?" asked the hobbit full of excitement. He loved maps, as I have told you before; and he also loved runes and letters, and cunning handwriting, though when he wrote himself it was a bit thin and spidery.
Aaargh. I should NOT have watched that. Now I have to order another Nakaya. DARN IT!
Ken
Very nice video - naturally I understood every word (not!)
I enjoyed watching the 4 start barrel thread being cut - very much a handcrafted method of cutting.
Pens and paper everywhere, yet all our hearts did sink,
Pens and paper everywhere, but not a drop of ink.
"Cursive writing does not mean what I think it does"
Your pen posse looks like a lot of fun.
I really love this video. I've watched it twice now and both times I've appreciated my pen so much more.
Had to bump this back up after discovering this thread in the archives! The actual Nakaya video starts at 07:40 in. Interesting to see how some parts of the Nakaya ebonite work still use human pedal-power to run the lathe. Pity they didn't have a video of the actual urushi work being done in Wajima, though that is outside of Nakaya's factory. I had read how the employees at Nakaya are all retired from decades of work at the Platinum factory and are doing this to keep busy. Shows it's true and not hype.
It was nice to match-up some faces from the SF Pen Posse to names.
Bucket list - walk the Camino de Santiago again
catbert (September 2nd, 2019)
This video inspired me to start making pens and learn Urushi
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