@@vigisbigtm Brother I am unaware, but he too must be getting on in age, hopefully he was able to apprentice someone. It's a shame that the wealth stolen from India and other Commonwealth countries to pay for England's Industrial revolution was the trumpet all the way back then for the fast, cheap and nasty products we have today, unlike Mr Keizo fountain pen, he even had some for sale for $100 usd - unbelievable !!
@@tco13v only 100? That's actually an amazing price, most fully custom pens like this go for much more, particularly in Japan. Praise to him for having such good value in business too!
@@knightghost534 Pricing goes up with gold nibs, The cheapest 14k gold nib model I found was over 500 USD, and it was used. The less expensive models (300 USD and lower) have gold plated steel nibs. Nothing wrong with steel nibs, but they don't have the flexibility to allow much variation in line width if one wants to exert their calligraphic skills-
This is awesome! My sister studied in Japan for 7 years and had been given one of these pens as a present. I never knew there was so much work involved to make one of these. Thank you for the video.
Look up, "The making" that's what just brought me here from the recommended tab. (One episode about making gold leaf) It follows the same formula as this. It's like, "How it's made" except it's Japanese and it shows each and every step along with the worker's, etc. Also damn you're cute as hell
Jason Yang - Mass production is excellent for TV's, DVD's, cars or fridges BUT with something as personal as a special fountain pen (the kind of pen that is given as a gift) it's still better to have something that was hand-made with care by a master craftsman. It is a real pleasure to watch people working who take real care and pride in a job well done.
Jason Yang Something handmade, by a craftsman, is almost always better than something mass produced. Better quality, better for & finish, better wearing, better looking, better feeling, better....
For real. Wish somebody would get Mr. Kato a taller workbench to give his back/neck some relief! I wonder that's the only position he can really work in, though. Well, in any case, he is a legend.
I really do love watching these kind of videos where fountain pens get hand-made and produced by one person, it goes to show the love and attention the maker gives to every one of his/her items.
Love the lathe with the wooden collet body and the clamping rings. The sound of the flat belt and splice going across the pulleys made a wonderful sound.
So you can one day tell your grandchildren that one day a long time ago, you watched a video on 'the internet' about an old person making something 'by hand'. And they will be awed.
Another video that strikes my heart. Every inch of this video is a sacred grail of work, expertise and excellence. Our love for work pays a tribute to our past. This is the type of video that I put in a pedestal as the raw valuable production of the internet. We achieved something with Google and TH-cam. We rescued all these people from obscurity. We place them in high regards, respect, duty and traditions. If this is the future, I want more of it.
This is incredible! I admire this man's dedication. I had a hard time watching the old man work though tbh, his back and spine looks like it's spent so much time sitting in that exact bent over position, that it probably hurts or at least feels uncomfortable to stand up straight. This is a man that really needs to retire and focus on his health, family, etc.
Who will want to do this in future? It's wonderful to watch and imagine being next to him to really see what he does (but I'm wearing goggles!). Incredible craftsmanship.
It's hard to beat a quality fountain pen. I had used one when I went to an engineering school. I had to be able to write as fast as a professor talked during a lecture. It was nearly impossible to write fast with a regular ball pen. I resorted to a fountain pen with a gold plated end. It worked amazingly well.
The oil based BIC ballpoint has killed cursive. People revert to print to save muscle fatigue, and this slows down answer response during exams. Less time is available for thought.
Thank you for posting. One hopes that these kind of documentaries are shown in schools to the kids. Just for them to value the love, work, dedication, and resourcefulness of how their ancestors had to do things. (Kind regards from Argentina)
Michael,Thank you very much for your beautiful videos. I look at them again and again and I never tire of seeing them, with them was born my passion for fountain pen.
I love everything about this video. The craftsmanship, the unique tools, the love, the spending time with our elders, the fact that at age 97 they are as youthful as a child.
This is incredible; thank you. The lathe chuck system is brilliant; the leather belt PTO system is so simple, and I love that they even have a traditional Japanese foot powered lathe. Some of the commentary is either inaccurate (saying "adjusting internal diameter" when he's really tapping threads), or sparse, as the master shares a long story that is only briefly summarized in the captions. Oh well! It's a gift to have SOME subtitles, and this is truly a rare peek into older methods of craftsmanship. Thank you.
3:05 wow! What a simple yet so effective and efficient way to tighten the chuck!! Just a wooden cylinder split into 3 or 4 sections towards the bit end and then you just slide the ring up until its snug from the chuck expanding where its grabbing the object. Really cool to see that
I'm 76 now. In my school days we used Pilot Fountain Pens in Burma. They were Made in Japan. All 3000 pupils used Fountain Pens filled from an Quink Ink Bottle. They had Rubber Tubes and a tiny Lever to suck in the Ink. They were economical and simple. Then around 1953, Ball Point Pens came out for the first time.
I lost count HOW many times I have watched this video!!! How awesome would be to hang around and learn from this guy! I wonder where does he get his lathes 🤔
What a really lovely film, I too don't know how I arrived here but watching these 2 gentlemen in their work was a privilege, So precise and what a change in his face when not concentrating so happy Thanks you from a Pen Appreciator x
To my dearly Kiyoshi Kato san. I' m indeed happier to watch you in your workshop. You are amazing craftsman with very good eyes and strong hands. I love reading and writing, books and fountain pens are my dearly friends. i don't mind spending wisely and extra money for JAPAN MADE fountain pen because you have given new good life for everyone in every single words i used to write with your brilliant masterpiece a JAPAN MADE fountain pen. TQSM.
Edit: Good to hear the work continues. Please tell me the guy that was there in the first part of the video has been apprenticing and can continue this when Mr Kato goes on to his next life and that beautiful, little shop will be making pens for many many more years to come.
Mr. Kato is a gifted craftsman who takes pride in his workmanship and has great attention to detail.. Men like Mr. Kato rebuilt postwar Japan and made it into the economic powerhouse that it is today. It's that type of mentality that we need to instill into the younger generations.
It 's always very interesting to see how things are produced ! thank you ! Nice craftsman work ! I don't know if we will continue to use fountain pen in the future... sadly everything is electronic nowadays !
That collet closer mini lathe is so cool. I wish we had something like that in America. Smallest machine I've seen one on is a $3,000 hardinge that weighs 2,000 lbs
Man are you kiddin me or what? You are so right!!! That thing is super cool and I don't know of anythin that it exists for someone who does woodworking as a hobby but can't spend every moment of spare time devoted to it. This machine would be so cool to have in my little shop.
Fantastic display of skills that are dying out. But at 8:20 he's not adjusting the internal dimensions, as the caption says, but putting an internal thread in. I use a Mont Blanc fountain pen, but after watching this, I decided to search one of these out. Wonderful to watch.
Not sure how I got here, but this is inspiring. I'd love to work on being exceptionally good at one specific thing. I'm pulled in a million different directions every day at work, which has made me a jack of all trades but master of none. It's frustrating.
If This type of a dedicated worker and craftsman working at his age were my parents.. i think I would also be empowered to do the same. So inspiring to see productive people.
I sold pens for 4 years , all types but this was the first time i ever saw them being made , i have even repaired some of his pens , new nibs etc. It is becoming a lost art but writing with a fountain pen is an experience .
The person who had uploaded them before is completely gone from the net. His account here is deactivated, so all his content was removed. I couldn't let that stand so I went and found copies of everything I could.
Mr. Kato appears to have passed in 2010, unfortunately. Mr. Onishi (also in the vid) took over the shop from what I understand. global.rakuten.com/en/store/penroom/item/20807/?s-id=borderless_browsehist_en
I enjoy looking at these craftsmen at work.one of the best craft vids I've found on YT is the Colonial craftsmen making a 16 th century musket from scratch!not an electric tool in site.well worth watching.about 1 hour long,enjoy.
Primero que nada doy mis respetos y mi admiracion a estas personas por entregar un ligado de su trabajo y su dedicacion . Estas personas nos dan una leccion de vida y sacrificio a todos demostrando con su arte que las personas mayores son un ejemplo de sabiduria y una gran dedicacion al esfuerzo . No se hablar ingles o otro idioma pero si pueden traducirlo a su idioma solo decir .. Una gran leccion les dio a todo mundo srs. Desde chile antofagasta mis respetos uds y familias .. Una hermosura de trabajo.. Que dios los vendiga ...
I feel like the industrialization of our different crafts has left us depressed. Honestly, I don't know if we're going to be any happier in the future, I think we're just going to get unhappier by every generation. I don't think there's many feelings like creating something people value and are willing to spend hard earned money on. This is mostly just limited to people who are the creative sort today, it's a shame really :/
Syni Cyst it just isn't practical anymore. Kids used to go to school until like the third grade then get shoved into an apprenticeship and learn one trade for the next 15 years then go off on their own. Sure they could make a fantastic pair of shoes but they couldn't read, wrote or much of anything else like we can do now.
+Mason R And what good does it do us? The old way of doing things, the apprentices had shelter, a place to sleep, and food. Usually they weren't paid while learning and working. But it was common practice for them to get paid a large lump sum by their masters when the apprenticeship was over. They went out, established themselves in a neighboring town or region, made money, got married, and then had families they could support. Unlike today, where every lazy jack-ass who refuses to work gets taken care of by those who do, through government handouts. They bring children into this world they can't support. And they don't care. But they can read stories in the latest gossip rags of the new boy Taylor Swift is dating. Oh yeah.... far better off today individually and as a society than back then.
Go tell that to banksters, they are heavily responsible for the disapearance of skilled craft and apprenticeship because they will not fund new businesses working in a small shop like all experts craftsmans are.
Syni Cyst i agree wholeheartedly! I read recently that a master watchmaker was sad because he had noone to pass down his skills too! And none of the young people he knew wanted to learn! I design and make reproduction stained glass window/door units for the modern double glazing industry. Its not as skilled as traditional stained glass...but it still takes alot of skill and time and its all by hand! And i love it!! Iam currently approaching the end of a 6 month period of being off work due to a bad back and wen i return i dont think i can do wat i love as it involves lots of bending lifting and being hunched over a table all day. So iam sad myself.
What a wonderful man Mr. Kiyoshi seemed to be I feel like we spoke fluently in japanese it would be an honor to sit and hold a conversation and a beer with this man
He died in 2010 and all stocks sold out. His assistant is now running the business but I do not know if he can call the pens by the deceased Mr Kato name.
Sadly Mr Kato passed away in 2010, but his skill lives on in his pupil Keizo Onishi (who was a retiree himself when he became Kato's student).
Very sad to hear. God bless his soul. Does Mr Keizo teach? It's a fine craft and should be passed to future generations.
@@vigisbigtm Brother I am unaware, but he too must be getting on in age, hopefully he was able to apprentice someone. It's a shame that the wealth stolen from India and other Commonwealth countries to pay for England's Industrial revolution was the trumpet all the way back then for the fast, cheap and nasty products we have today, unlike Mr Keizo fountain pen, he even had some for sale for $100 usd - unbelievable !!
@@tco13v $100 for this type of quality is hella cheap
@@tco13v only 100? That's actually an amazing price, most fully custom pens like this go for much more, particularly in Japan. Praise to him for having such good value in business too!
@@knightghost534 Pricing goes up with gold nibs, The cheapest 14k gold nib model I found was over 500 USD, and it was used. The less expensive models (300 USD and lower) have gold plated steel nibs. Nothing wrong with steel nibs, but they don't have the flexibility to allow much variation in line width if one wants to exert their calligraphic skills-
This is awesome! My sister studied in Japan for 7 years and had been given one of these pens as a present. I never knew there was so much work involved to make one of these. Thank you for the video.
I watched this 3x already and love it .... the sounds, the craftsmanship, the expertise .... 👍
It’s amazing how people came up with how to make these things and the machines . I wish my brain could work like that.
Hannah Hesler it does ,algorithm here to remind humans the importance of a human touch
Look up, "The making" that's what just brought me here from the recommended tab. (One episode about making gold leaf) It follows the same formula as this. It's like, "How it's made" except it's Japanese and it shows each and every step along with the worker's, etc.
Also damn you're cute as hell
Don't worry, someday your brain will work
This is brilliant. If not for these dedicated craftsmen, we will be left with nothing but mass produced stuff.
Thank you Mr Kato and Michael T Shue
Tejus Vyas You're welcome
wt about mass produced product
Jason Yang - Mass production is excellent for TV's, DVD's, cars or fridges BUT with something as personal as a special fountain pen (the kind of pen that is given as a gift) it's still better to have something that was hand-made with care by a master craftsman. It is a real pleasure to watch people working who take real care and pride in a job well done.
Jason Yang Something handmade, by a craftsman, is almost always better than something mass produced. Better quality, better for & finish, better wearing, better looking, better feeling, better....
Jake Alamo
That chuck design has been around forever. It, and others, were used before the metal chuck.
His back has paid a high price for his skill in pen making 🥺
For real. Wish somebody would get Mr. Kato a taller workbench to give his back/neck some relief! I wonder that's the only position he can really work in, though. Well, in any case, he is a legend.
When I was younger, my mum said I'd end up looking like that if I didn't stand up straight.
I really do love watching these kind of videos where fountain pens get hand-made and produced by one person, it goes to show the love and attention the maker gives to every one of his/her items.
Love the lathe with the wooden collet body and the clamping rings. The sound of the flat belt and splice going across the pulleys made a wonderful sound.
i was just thinking the same thing about the flat belt and the calming sound it makes
Ya I said the same thing, bit in a much less cohesive comment above lol. I really like the wood chuck with the rings
Chasing threads in celluloid, with a foot-powered spindle...The Master.
Or shaving it down with a knife without a tool rest at 8:05
I have no idea why I am watching this, but it is awesome.
ukspizzaman mb cuz its 420
Life needs no reason to enjoy something...Just let it go 😉
TH-cam explained perfectly in one sentence.
Mad skills displayed. And poor ergonomy.
So you can one day tell your grandchildren that one day a long time ago, you watched a video on 'the internet' about an old person making something 'by hand'.
And they will be awed.
Respect. There are also many hard working workers around the world. Love their work!
These are the people who deserves CEO salary.
Another video that strikes my heart. Every inch of this video is a sacred grail of work, expertise and excellence. Our love for work pays a tribute to our past.
This is the type of video that I put in a pedestal as the raw valuable production of the internet. We achieved something with Google and TH-cam. We rescued all these people from obscurity. We place them in high regards, respect, duty and traditions.
If this is the future, I want more of it.
This is incredible! I admire this man's dedication. I had a hard time watching the old man work though tbh, his back and spine looks like it's spent so much time sitting in that exact bent over position, that it probably hurts or at least feels uncomfortable to stand up straight.
This is a man that really needs to retire and focus on his health, family, etc.
Who will want to do this in future? It's wonderful to watch and imagine being next to him to really see what he does (but I'm wearing goggles!). Incredible craftsmanship.
I don’t know what I like the most, the pens or the man’s peaceful attitude; it soothes
Excellent video. No background tune, no double speed play. Insane attention for detail. Thank you!
It's hard to beat a quality fountain pen. I had used one when I went to an engineering school. I had to be able to write as fast as a professor talked during a lecture. It was nearly impossible to write fast with a regular ball pen. I resorted to a fountain pen with a gold plated end. It worked amazingly well.
The oil based BIC ballpoint has killed cursive. People revert to print to save muscle fatigue, and this slows down answer response during exams. Less time is available for thought.
Thank you for posting. One hopes that these kind of documentaries are shown in schools to the kids. Just for them to value the love, work, dedication, and resourcefulness of how their ancestors had to do things. (Kind regards from Argentina)
I love handmade items and especially fountain pens. These are incredible
Michael,Thank you very much for your beautiful videos. I look at them again and again and I never tire of seeing them, with them was born my passion for fountain pen.
Your welcome, but I did not create the videos, just shared them.
this is just amazing. So much goes into their work and the way they skillfully adjust and many other quality checks done by hand is.., WOW.
RIP Kato-san. It's sad that such a skilled craftsman has passed, but good to hear that his business (and the skills) live on.
tarbyonline is that true? Sad but a beautiful legacy!
What an incrediable video. Love his Craftsmanship. You can see the years and hard work he put into his passion.
Kato-san has such awesome skills and is yet so humble. Such a joy just to watch him. 👍
he passed away
Kato Son! Your craftsmanship is second to none! I would be honored to use one of your fountain pens....
San. Not, Son.
Total respect to this old gentleman. I hope he's still alive and pumping out pens.
Sadly, he passed away in 2010, but his work is still continued by an old apprentice of his
Nostalgia. Great video honoring Mr. Kato
I love everything about this video.
The craftsmanship, the unique tools, the love, the spending time with our elders, the fact that at age 97 they are as youthful as a child.
Also, despite my terrible handwriting, I have a thing for great pens.
This is incredible; thank you. The lathe chuck system is brilliant; the leather belt PTO system is so simple, and I love that they even have a traditional Japanese foot powered lathe. Some of the commentary is either inaccurate (saying "adjusting internal diameter" when he's really tapping threads), or sparse, as the master shares a long story that is only briefly summarized in the captions. Oh well! It's a gift to have SOME subtitles, and this is truly a rare peek into older methods of craftsmanship. Thank you.
Boxes
Amazing , his idea to make pens, his workshop equipment, and him, all of it
Jim Clarke b
Jim Clarke )
I am so glad that somebody has kept this footage . Thank you Michael.
3:05 wow! What a simple yet so effective and efficient way to tighten the chuck!! Just a wooden cylinder split into 3 or 4 sections towards the bit end and then you just slide the ring up until its snug from the chuck expanding where its grabbing the object. Really cool to see that
I'm 76 now. In my school days we used Pilot Fountain Pens in Burma. They were Made in Japan. All 3000 pupils used Fountain Pens filled from an Quink Ink Bottle. They had Rubber Tubes and a tiny Lever to suck in the Ink. They were economical and simple. Then around 1953, Ball Point Pens came out for the first time.
I classic TH-cam video.
I have no idea what he's doing but it looks amazing
As a new pen maker who's wanting to a some point learn to make "kitless" pens these videos are great.
Wow, to know that I own one is amazing. What a honor
I lost count HOW many times I have watched this video!!! How awesome would be to hang around and learn from this guy! I wonder where does he get his lathes 🤔
What a really lovely film, I too don't know how I arrived here but watching these 2 gentlemen in their work was a privilege, So precise and what a change in his face when not concentrating so happy Thanks you from a Pen Appreciator x
Total respect for this master craftsman. Years of dedication and devotion. Beautiful fountain pens. I love this video thank you for sharing. 💖🙏💕
I wonder if his neck hurts.
No, he died in 2010
@chopper212s that's a hard no
youtube watcher really, what made you think that?
@@michaelmckay hahaha I nearly spat out my coffee
I honestly really want to know why anyone would “dislike” this video.
To my dearly Kiyoshi Kato san. I' m indeed happier to watch you in your workshop. You are amazing craftsman with very good eyes and strong hands. I love reading and writing, books and fountain pens are my dearly friends. i don't mind spending wisely and extra money for JAPAN MADE fountain pen because you have given new good life for everyone in every single words i used to write with your brilliant masterpiece a JAPAN MADE fountain pen. TQSM.
He is a National Treasure. I would love to use one of his pens!
So fast working yet so consistent. This is what mastery looks like.
You are a real master. Hope your art will continue for the next generation. You are the best.
*Daniel Michaud*
He is not a master, he is a craftsman, and there is a difference...
Edit: Good to hear the work continues. Please tell me the guy that was there in the first part of the video has been apprenticing and can continue this when Mr Kato goes on to his next life and that beautiful, little shop will be making pens for many many more years to come.
I respect this man and really love this video i wish some day i buy one of his unique art.
Thank you.
Mr. Kato is a gifted craftsman who takes pride in his workmanship and has great attention to detail.. Men like Mr. Kato rebuilt postwar Japan and made it into the economic powerhouse that it is today. It's that type of mentality that we need to instill into the younger generations.
Absolutely AWESOME Indeed!
Many many thanks for posting. 😎👍👍
Sincerely,
Tom Weidler in Las Vegas Nevada
Ojiisan's spine has been shaped by decades of working in the same position....
It 's always very interesting to see how things are produced !
thank you !
Nice craftsman work !
I don't know if we will continue to use fountain pen in the future... sadly everything is electronic nowadays !
The ultra quick change Chuck is simply brilliant.
I also find the quick-change chuck the most impressive part of this video.
No idea why this popped up in my feed but I’m glad it did, mesmerising. 👍
That collet closer mini lathe is so cool. I wish we had something like that in America. Smallest machine I've seen one on is a $3,000 hardinge that weighs 2,000 lbs
Man are you kiddin me or what? You are so right!!! That thing is super cool and I don't know of anythin that it exists for someone who does woodworking as a hobby but can't spend every moment of spare time devoted to it. This machine would be so cool to have in my little shop.
Felicitări si Respect pentru pasiunea cu care munciti!
What beautiful sounds this little workshop makes!
It is the passion of a Craftsman that creates such beautiful things,Mr kato's work fascinates those who value hard work,zeal & creativity.
Apparently 7 Bic sales reps watched this video.
no name
no name HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAAAAA
what about biro reps
I got it...
Great series. Thanks for posting these.
worth watching..such a talented person Mr. Kato....RESPECT
What a truly remarkable craftsman, engineer, artist and all-round gentleman!
I was surprised that there are so many processes.
Fantastic display of skills that are dying out. But at 8:20 he's not adjusting the internal dimensions, as the caption says, but putting an internal thread in. I use a Mont Blanc fountain pen, but after watching this, I decided to search one of these out. Wonderful to watch.
Not sure how I got here, but this is inspiring. I'd love to work on being exceptionally good at one specific thing. I'm pulled in a million different directions every day at work, which has made me a jack of all trades but master of none. It's frustrating.
Take heart, Matt. The full saying is “Jack of all trades, master of none - but better than a master of one.”
I love these craftsmen. He's probably been using the same machinery for 50 years.
Any artesian video that is traditional is awesome! I love watching this stuff man. It soothes my soul in a strange way
eyegasm!!!!!!! thank you for uploading this video!
If This type of a dedicated worker and craftsman working at his age were my parents.. i think I would also be empowered to do the same. So inspiring to see productive people.
I love watching people who do things precisely but don't waste time.
I sold pens for 4 years , all types but this was the first time i ever saw them being made , i have even repaired some of his pens , new nibs etc. It is becoming a lost art but writing with a fountain pen is an experience
.
Thanks you so much for creating fountain pens .
The sound of the craftmanship is so outstanding!
Yeah I don't know what happened to those videos. They must have gotten taken down for some reason. Thanks for posting these!
The person who had uploaded them before is completely gone from the net. His account here is deactivated, so all his content was removed. I couldn't let that stand so I went and found copies of everything I could.
Now I see why those pens are really expensive
He's a dedicated craftsman and deserves nothing but Respect ......
Very efficient old school methods/equipment, enjoyed watching!
Damn....thats passion + dedication in a nutshell
that wood chuck blow me away
so do I
Really nice that it was opperable without stopping for a key
The craftsmanship is amazing but that chuck is incredible
Its revolutionary
No chit, the original keyless chuck.
As a millwright I can say it is a joy to watch this video and appreciate the exacting craftsmanship on display here.
R.I.P. Mr. Kato. Much respect.
I wanted to see someone write something with some flourish with one.
Great video! Just an old world craftsman letting his work speak for itself without all the typical yammering on and on.
wow great video I would love to have one of Mr. kato pens in my collection!
Mr. Kato appears to have passed in 2010, unfortunately. Mr. Onishi (also in the vid) took over the shop from what I understand. global.rakuten.com/en/store/penroom/item/20807/?s-id=borderless_browsehist_en
Michael T Shue Studios oh I didn't know that, R. I. P. ur beautiful work lives on, my son name is Kiyoshi too.
Michael T Shue Studios
I enjoy looking at these craftsmen at work.one of the best craft vids I've found on YT is the Colonial craftsmen making a 16 th century musket from scratch!not an electric tool in site.well worth watching.about 1 hour long,enjoy.
Primero que nada doy mis respetos y mi admiracion a estas personas por entregar un ligado de su trabajo y su dedicacion .
Estas personas nos dan una leccion de vida y sacrificio a todos demostrando con su arte que las personas mayores son un ejemplo de sabiduria y una gran dedicacion al esfuerzo .
No se hablar ingles o otro idioma pero si pueden traducirlo a su idioma solo decir ..
Una gran leccion les dio a todo mundo srs.
Desde chile antofagasta mis respetos uds y familias ..
Una hermosura de trabajo..
Que dios los vendiga ...
Incredible skill and experts in making the best ink pens
The price of such craftsmanship is very high... his spine
A true craftsman. Great video.
I love how in the far East they keep all their old crafts alive, doing everything manually rather than the modern day automated processes.
Weaabooss maximus
I feel like the industrialization of our different crafts has left us depressed. Honestly, I don't know if we're going to be any happier in the future, I think we're just going to get unhappier by every generation. I don't think there's many feelings like creating something people value and are willing to spend hard earned money on. This is mostly just limited to people who are the creative sort today, it's a shame really :/
Felicitarii ,pentru filmare si realizare .RO
It is a shame that the idea of apprenticeship is dying and that we are losing skilled crafts.
Syni Cyst it just isn't practical anymore. Kids used to go to school until like the third grade then get shoved into an apprenticeship and learn one trade for the next 15 years then go off on their own. Sure they could make a fantastic pair of shoes but they couldn't read, wrote or much of anything else like we can do now.
+Mason R
And what good does it do us? The old way of doing things, the apprentices had shelter, a place to sleep, and food. Usually they weren't paid while learning and working. But it was common practice for them to get paid a large lump sum by their masters when the apprenticeship was over.
They went out, established themselves in a neighboring town or region, made money, got married, and then had families they could support.
Unlike today, where every lazy jack-ass who refuses to work gets taken care of by those who do, through government handouts.
They bring children into this world they can't support. And they don't care. But they can read stories in the latest gossip rags of the new boy Taylor Swift is dating. Oh yeah.... far better off today individually and as a society than back then.
No worry. They will be all replaced by robots. Most of the artisanships are now produced by robotic machines.
Go tell that to banksters, they are heavily responsible for the disapearance of skilled craft and apprenticeship because they will not fund new businesses working in a small shop like all experts craftsmans are.
Syni Cyst i agree wholeheartedly!
I read recently that a master watchmaker was sad because he had noone to pass down his skills too!
And none of the young people he knew wanted to learn!
I design and make reproduction stained glass window/door units for the modern double glazing industry.
Its not as skilled as traditional stained glass...but it still takes alot of skill and time and its all by hand!
And i love it!!
Iam currently approaching the end of a 6 month period of being off work due to a bad back and wen i return i dont think i can do wat i love as it involves lots of bending lifting and being hunched over a table all day.
So iam sad myself.
Great craftsmanship! I love to see those very different tools in use that seem so dofferent from what is used in the west.
*Alex 2Q*
In the West we don't say "dofferent", we say "different".
Now I'm late for work couldn't stop watching
I love Japan and his wonderful people. It is always inspiring how they worry to pass skill and knowledge.
What a wonderful man Mr. Kiyoshi seemed to be I feel like we spoke fluently in japanese it would be an honor to sit and hold a conversation and a beer with this man
Great video. Excellent job. That man is a really big artist. I always write with fountain pen. Congratulations.
He died in 2010 and all stocks sold out. His assistant is now running the business but I do not know if he can call the pens by the deceased Mr Kato name.
*richardb154
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He can call the business "Deceased Mr Kato Limited".
richardb154 s
Redblade y
lindy
It was a joke, where is your sense of humour?
Wow! What an amazing video! I’d love to own one of those pens!
Those humps were created with years of craftsmanship. Wish I can have a pen from them
A fascinating process. His back may be bent but his eyes are still sharp-no spectacles.