These are used for official documents I imagine not just office memos. When I was in Japan in 1999 with my students we carved our own from soapstone. The process of creating such beautiful and exacting seals was fascinating to observe. Thank you!
@@urchinsea6297 Thank you for your reply. This is a seal. In Japan, we still use seals instead of signatures on documents. Also, for official documents, we use seals registered with the government office and attach a seal certificate.
@@urchinsea6297 I understand. Thank you for letting me know. Japanese seals were introduced from ancient China 2,300 years ago. In Japan, seals have been used for authoritative purposes since ancient times. This continues in modern Japan, but in the future, signatures may become mainstream.
Absolutely amazing. Such perfect work, taking something so historically important into the future. The detail give such respect to the family and owners name. Just marvelous!
If you live in Japan, these things are mandatory for some obscure reason when you need to sign some administrative papers, and it usually costs a lot (these ones even more, probably).
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The final print with paint, its absorption into the paper and spreading around the perimeter, negates the initial accuracy of the print. To reproduce a print, printing with a large error in size is sufficient.
@@firstmaster100 Did you even watch the first like, 15 seconds of the video? They literally test it on paper and the lines are so clean and precise that it even has the tiny bumps on the lines in the design. If that isn't extremely accurate then I don't know what is LOL
@@recilinceYou are taking my words out of context, distorting the essence. I did not say that the tool was poorly made, only that the liquid paint print can be faked using another tool that has significant deviations from the original high-precision one.
@@recilinceTo put it simply, it is not the instrument itself that is copied, it is the impression that is copied, but because of the method of application it does not require such an identical instrument. Demonstrating precision by turning a design into a smooth surface is more of a publicity stunt and has nothing to do with the uniqueness of the print. It's like comparing a laser and an inkjet printer. Do you understand the difference in the result and the reason for this?
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Прекрасная вещь! Почему вы не дали насладится ею и рассмотреть ближе? Все время только мелькала перед глазами. Вы не дали оценить вашу работу до конца! За работу + за съёмку- !
more of a flex than useful item. Rubber stamp does the same just costs 10 instead of 1000. Of course if there is a market for "flex" its not wrong to provide it. I also don't understand people who spend thousands on wrist watches when you have time on smartphone
Hi Japan ~ Please keep your stamping technology. China and Korea isn't going to use stamping. They use just signatures. Please stick to stamping technology. Stay there for a long time to future.
I couldn't tell if the positive and negative are cut at the same time or in two operations. Given the 12 hour cutting time, I'm guessing they are cut separately. The seals must cost at least 3,000 USD (300,000 yen) estimated off the shop time. Pruno
I'm surprised this is a 2-part CNC and that they don't use Wire EDM. It would reduce the work to a single pass and you'd get 2x as many done, and the fit would be even finer than what you see, here. Edit: That's what I get for commenting too early on a video...
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="79">1:19</a> I apologize if I sound rude 🙇 but Adobe illustrator would clean those stroke up really fast… especially if you just need vector output. Frankly, just from your initial drawing, using a tablet would speed up that initial process.
Wow, that is some precise engineering and tools! We're looking at thousandths of millimeters being machined at some points! And just the attention to care of assembly of the seal! This must be made for only those that are very important or wealthy. I can't imagine that even if common Japanese people need their seals for all sorts of reasons like document signing and official forms, to have a seal THAT well crafted is mind blowing! Most people's seals are just no more than a rubber stamp nowadays!
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="71">1:11</a> having a window behind your monitor is not healthy for the eyes... but with such views, who can blame them 🙂