The way the both of them are connected to their environment and seek that connection... it's all cyclical! These rocks have been here long before us, and they will be here after, but touched by our hands and these beautiful crafts!
So he sells stones between $750 to $2200 because he's South Korean. If he were Indian or Chinese no one would pay more than $20 a stone and max a $100 for larger and more engraved stone.
@@MrUNCLESAM84 People pay for somethings quality and condition, they don't pay based on the person's origins.. it's not China's fault, Chinese people are plagued with the problem of it being the primary source for cheap products and fakes.. not joking in some collecting worlds I am in, China is the one source you never trust unless you go there in person the risk is just far to high NOT because they are Chinese, but because it is a known fact for it to be a common source for fakes. Like with Pokémon cards for one example, Walmart in person stores have REAL cards, Walmart's online section however is riddled with fakes because of a Chinese business known as JoyBuy that is connected to Walmart and scams people out of hundreds of dollars worth of products they are faking. That's just one example, but to assume racism, makes you the racist. The majority of people are not making a choice based on the person unless they are truly racist (but again you can't assume this), they're making the decision based on the product and the history with the product and those sources. Hope you do some research before throwing random out of you ass claims especially about things like racism.
"you are just resting" and "he is more senior than me" xD two elderly gentleman who work together since only god knows, still roasting eachother is always a good sign
All that cutting and all that chiseling with a key 10 of the detail and everything is hand done with nothing more than physical labor and hand tools and at his age congrats I hope he Continues to do what he loves
Great content! as the world crisis progresses the smartest thing people do lately is building a strong investment that isn’t controlled by the government. Like digital currencies.
Absolutely! Building a strong investment that isn’t controlled by the government is a smart move in todays unpredictable economy. digital assets offer a unique opportunity for financial independence.
Are individuals still holding crypto coin and stocks? I didn’t know that , I guess a few know about integrating into the micro economy to help substitute FIAT or usdt for a more tangible exchange Experience, it more like capitalization with about 43.307% profits/ ROI weekly though.. ps..Kimberly Jane Carl,got me covered!
"Hey everyone! 👋 Just starting my investment journey in crypto and stocks. 🚀 Learning the ropes and excited about the possibilities. Any tips or or info on how I’ll reach out to Kimberly Jane Carl,Let's grow together! 🌱
The reasons inkstones is much better than bottled ink. The ink stick can be exploited by the pressure on the inkstone. This means the fineness of ink particles can be controlled. The inksticks come in a huge variety of starting ingredients. The soot made from oil, pine or other trees, tar soot, lacquer soot, etc. This gives the ink variations in subtle tints from blue, purple to reddish and greenish. The glue used effects the body of the ink on the brush. How it interacts with water and the paper. The older the inkstick the better it is. The molecular weight drops, which gives the ink a faster yet more controllable feel. The ink also sticks to the hair in a way, which always the brush to be far more sensitive. Especially when using very fine hair of high quality brushes. Bottled ink attacks the hair of the brushes, wearing them out quicker. Older ink does not dry out as quick, if it does, the rewetting doesn't cause uncontrolled streaking issues or rings. Inksticks over 15 years but generally more than twenty, does not go off in a day. It can ge kept up to two weeks and never stinks, unlike bottled ink which smells rancid after a day or two. Bottled ink is much more difficult to clean out of the brush. In the end inksticks are actually cheaper. Each can produce several gallons or more. Beware of poor quality inksticks and inkstones. Never buy inkstones based on name. Low quality stones can come from famous pits because of the limited supply. A good quality inkstick feels like fingernail. Oily, smooth yet a slightly sticky. Bever too heavy. Japanese and Koreans may lacquer and buff some types of inksticks. These are very shiny. Crisp details in design never sloppy. A hollow sound as an nkstick ages, when flicked with the finger. GoodCharacters out of California sells high quality Sam Yick brushes and a good colkection of inksticks.
Me: Is it because they’re made by a dwindling group of- [aging artisans who can’t find apprentices for a passion trade in this economy?] Husband, who has seen the vid and heard me say this many times before: Yes.
Also demand. While it's expensive due to craftsmanship, not a lot really buy them. Mayne rich people or as expensive gifts. Why get one when manufactured ones, even plastic ones will suffice?
I'm glad someone mentioned it because ever since learning about the monopoly they hold over the country it makes you want to try spoting the company's chokehold everywhere. Not a phone you'd see an elderly person have in America usually that's for sure
wow we finish the trinity we now know why calligraphy brushes, ink sticks, and ink stones are so expensive. What's next the calligraphy paper they're on?
There is another one about how different ink blocks are made. It's also done by an older man. The work they do is amazing and I hope they teach/taught others so it doesn't become a lost art.
I always love to see these craft works, it feels like doing things by hand, the old way, although more time consuming, it's best if you just want to "shut down" from society and focus only on doing your work. Feels almost meditative.
I should have known but I didn't realize Koreans used ink stones as well. Great to see the difference between the Japanese and the Korean ink stone creation
So he sells stones between $750 to $2200 because he's South Korean. If he were Indian or Chinese no one would pay more than $20 a stone and max a $100 for larger and more engraved stone.
Business insider story telling I absolutely look forward to, its rich, spiritual and they spend time deeply connecting with the people they document. Lovely stuff 10/10
So he sells stones between $750 to $2200 because he's South Korean. If he were Indian or Chinese no one would pay more than $20 a stone and max a $100 for larger and more engraved stone.
Guan yuku's dedication to crafting inkstones from natural red rock is truly admirable, showcasing the artistry and tradition behind calligraphy. The level of control and quality of ink these inkstones offer is unparalleled, making them a valuable tool for professional calligraphers. 🖋
I like that caligrapher's views and explanations. They are tastefully sensational about their art, but without the BS and OVER sensationalization that comes with a lot of different art you see now a days (think "the blue dot on this otherwise plain white canvas is meant to show deep rooted depression" and crap like that).
So he sells stones between $750 to $2200 because he's South Korean. If he were Indian or Chinese no one would pay more than $20 a stone and max a $100 for larger and more engraved stone.
@@MrUNCLESAM84Indians and Chinese take shortcuts to mass produce souvenirs and everyone knows it and that is why their work sells for a lot less. Anyone who puts a lot of work into a piece will not sell it for dirt cheap; the Indians and Chinese will simply not spend this much time on a single piece because there is no demand for such things in their respective markets. This guy is only able to sell these stones for that much because there is demand for them and he has a good reputation for doing excellent work.
I feel like many of the steps in that process could be easily modernized without any drawbacks. But I guess the love he puts into every step is part of the deal
There are plenty of mass-produced ink stones out there, too (the one Vincent Chong is using is probably one of them). This video is just showing you how one is made by a traditional craftsman.
Couldn't agree more, as a fashion designer knowing the true craft behind truly quality garments from all over the world, i can say for a fact that the more mechanised a system becomes, the lower the quality goes and the cheaper the prices. In the case of the fashion industry apprciation for the craft has died and all that remains is fast fashion and runways as we know them today. I'm not judging today's designers, merely stating that making something more automated and mechanised is not always a good thing.@w1-em4nq
My parents bought me one of those cheap mini calligraphy sets from Chinatown when I was a kid. Using the little ink stick on the stone felt like magic, even though I’d use it to draw pictures or hieroglyphics.
This man is a true craftsman. First, calligraphy brushes. Then, calligraphy ink sticks (from Business Insider India). Now, calligraphy inkstones. What’s next? The actual calligraphy process itself?
They included the process of calligraphy. Didn't you see Vincent acting like a chick while doing "contemporary" calligraphy? Kinda racist they used a deranged white man instead of a Korean master. But hey, they have to push the agenda...
They probably could do a video on why calligraphy is expensive (I wouldn't be surprised if this group can find calligraphy that costs >1000 USD). They'd probably focus on the whole production process for a mural or an exceptionally detailed seal stamp used on important legal documents.
Seeing the process of making calligraphy ink sticks, brushes, and now ink stones I’m now anticipating the upload of a video looking into the process of making calligraphy paper to complete the collection!
There are a lot. I think there is a video of making Vietnamese tradtional paper, which is of course pretty much the same as Chinese, Korean or Japanese, on this channel.
@NO-background-music-in-videos (😁 love the handle) Thank you. I said the same thing. Her voice is very low timbre and that music almost completely drowns her out.
👍👌👏 Oh WOW, simply fantastic! I use "modern" Calligraphy pens and steel feathers with common ink (mostly green because it's my favourite colour) to write letters and postcards. Unfortunately I can't use ink and inkstones like the ones in the documentary/documentation. Thanks a lot for making teaching explaining recording editing uploading and sharing. Best regards luck and especially health to all involved people.
It also makes it done the classic way. If something is done with modern power tools it’s just not the same. You want something fancy like this… we’ll all that labour and a lifetime of skill costs money… otherwise there are cheaper options. Trade skills have always been profitable, even more so these days as more and more people don’t bother and instead pay someone else to do it for them
@@-Devy- it does when you get things BECAUSE it’s done the old fashioned way. And guess what, all that time and a lifetime of skill costs money… and quality things always do. If you want mass produced garbage of course you will pay less
@@sinisterthoughts2896 the video explicitly says that the calligrapher they interviewed did not use inkstones crafted by the artisans they interviewed.
The strange guy at the end didn't even use anything, made by hand in Korea........ You are telling me the Korean guy that makes them couldn't point you in a direction to someone who actually use the fancy stuff??? last half of the video just felt out of place. "you know, like, its just rocks. It's like, weird." Not sure what any of that guy actually added to the video. He used a clay dish and poured bottled ink. Shame we didn't get to see one of the big beautiful ones get used and actually get to watch them mix the ink and then be used in the traditional way.... You guys did the traditional side very dirty. Could of at least included that too
@@koro_kokoro as a stone sculptor, everything else he does by hand makes total sense to me. Not how I would do it but I respect the level of control he's able to exercise by doing it with hand tools. But he's crazy not to be using a bandsaw for the first steps; no one, including the artisan, would be able to see any difference in the finished product after cutting it with a bandsaw vs cutting it with a hand saw.
5his channel surely gets a paycheck from japan if this was india they would had definetly shown unnecessary things 🙄 😅 i dont get why are they so expensive 😅
Hi. My self bandari gopalakrishna from India, living in Hyderabad. My father is a drawing artist. Now no more. Excellent artist. In school and arts college JNTU. School from All saints High' school. Hyd. He learned few signatures from Printed Books . He purchased several books and art formation. Brushes. Your video is very inspiring us. Good and health works.
I think its wonerous that we can begin to see the dedication and art of other asian cultures. Usually its always japan, and thats cool. However i often wondered what kind of extreme craftsmanship exists in places like south korea. I hope you guys cover many more of these types of stories.
Can we experience the beauty and raw artistry of an artisan making an ink stone without having your agenda forcefully pushed on us? These shows are no longer educational or enjoyable-they've turned into a vehicle for indoctrination.
What was the point of showing someone who doesn't even use this traditional ink stone? It adds nothing to the video. We want to hear someone who actually has experience with it
Why did they choose to interview some random roller blader who didn’t even use an ink stone like the ones the craftsman makes? Just to shove in propaganda?
Damn, Vincent did make this about themselves. For a split second I hope they wouldn’t do it. Such a different POV compared to Hyuk-su’s beautiful words about the art itself.
In another shed they have a bandsaw and a 5 axis CNC, right now they are both drinking beer and laughing that they got BI to buy it while counting money like Tony Montana.
Who cares if the student is gay. It has no baring on the inkstone. People of the 1st world have soft lives. This why who you sleep with, outshines the artist hand making every part of the inkstone. Merit means nothing to ideologues.
Criticizing him for being gay is unnecessary but yk the internet is how it is but there is some good points that the largely Asian art is being talked about by some random white guy who seemingly does not know what he’s talking about
What's the basis of Vincent's claim that queer and trans people have been at the center of art for all of human history? You can't just brush aside the total lack of evidence by saying "erasure". I get that this video isn't focused on that question, but that line shouldn't have made it into the final edit.
you have to love doing this for a living otherwise the quality wouldnt be there...and these 2 guys wouldnt put this effort in to do this form of art the old way...
It's part of that person's own artistic connection to calligraphy, certainly it's not universal for all calligraphers but I don't think they were trying to speak on behalf of all calligraphers. They were most likely asked a personal question by the interviewer and they answered it personally.
Beautiful work from both the ink stone artisan and the calligrapher - love that they could have chosen any modern artist who is continuing the craft and they specifically showed a trans person who is working their way up from using the affordable version of the traditional inkstone to one day be in a position to afford the more expensive elaborate stones that this video shows the inkstone artisan making! The respect for the craft is amazing to see from both perspectives
If you don’t connect to art, that’s a reflection of you. Art evolves and grows with each artist. When you don’t understand a connection, this is an opportunity to learn
@@heyustabbedme and when you don't understand that modern world political agendas have nothing to do with each individual's perception of art, you get to learn something as well. the queer kid was out of place in this video.
its about the individuality and the soul... the soul being put into an artform is a dieing thing making so much in say for example, music.... a dead form as its only ever for the money now in as fast a thing as possable. there is no flow anymore, no one is creative anymore. but this... that last little bit of creativity left in the big grand thing in the biggest picture of things. we need more daring people willing tp throw caution to the wayside, just like how the 1990s seen the biggest eletronic boom in such a short time thats still driving us to keep bettering tech.
South Koreans & Japanese are both excellent craftsmen. It's wonderful seeing them put their differences aside and come together for the greater good of the civilized free world. America couldn't ask for better partners! 🇺🇸🇯🇵🇰🇷
Appreciate what?! He sells stones between $750 to $2200 because he's South Korean. If he were Indian or Chinese no one would pay more than $20 a stone and max a $100 for larger and more engraved stone.
@@kristina5679 bought a straight razor couple of years ago, hand made "supposedly" in America Damascus steel from a blacksmith in Missouri, paid $700 for it and I'm not going to lie it's a piece of art, I didn't even use it I kept it in it's box to preserve it. Last November I was talking about it to a friend of mine, his family is originally from Pakistan and he told me that his uncle can make the exact same one for me if we showed it to him, long story short we video called his uncle and he said I can make it for $200 and I told him get outta here, his uncle reply was simply "challenge accepted" so we sent him a dozen pictures of the razor and hanged up. A month later my friend comes to my house with an unopened tape wrapped box that came in the mail to his address, we open the box and in there the razor with a flash drive that contains 5 hours and 42 minutes video of his uncle recording how he made it from scratch, and when he said hand made he meant it literally, he didn't use a hydraulic hammer nor electric sander, just his hand tools in a very simple "primitive" shop. I paid him $300 instead of the $200 and I'm using the semi hand "American" made razor now and preserving my $200 fully hand made Pakistani real piece of art. So trust me it's all about where and who worked on the item that been fabricated
THE BACKGROUND MUSIC IS TOO LOUD! Sorry~the background music is too loud. Plus the narrator's low timbre voice makes it difficult to hear her. I tuned on CC but it covered much of the video~turn it down, please!! I was really, really interested in this video, but that LOUD music made it frustrating.
I am curious, could the shavings and chipped pieces of the stones be sold and repurposed, maybe somehow turned into a clay to be made into cheaper inkstones? Obviously the additive of using binders to turn the dust into a clay would lower the quality, I just wonder if there is potential in something like that.
If I was a rock, I can't imagine how happy it would make me to hear a Korean craftsman say "This is a good rock"
Reminds me of Everything Everywhere All At Once.
I'm sure a rock would be very honored to turn from a plain rock to a beautifully carved ink stone, leaving your residue on paper as art..
If I was the one that wouldn't absorb water, I'd make it my homework for as long as it took to get chosen
LoL hahahahahah hilarious. True though
Yeah, let‘s go Rocky!
The way the both of them are connected to their environment and seek that connection... it's all cyclical! These rocks have been here long before us, and they will be here after, but touched by our hands and these beautiful crafts!
Thanks for watching!
BS. One is a master artisan, one is performing to make it about him not about the art or the tradition.
@@chrishan9138art has always since the beginning of time been about the artist.
So he sells stones between $750 to $2200 because he's South Korean.
If he were Indian or Chinese no one would pay more than $20 a stone and max a $100 for larger and more engraved stone.
@@MrUNCLESAM84 People pay for somethings quality and condition, they don't pay based on the person's origins.. it's not China's fault, Chinese people are plagued with the problem of it being the primary source for cheap products and fakes.. not joking in some collecting worlds I am in, China is the one source you never trust unless you go there in person the risk is just far to high NOT because they are Chinese, but because it is a known fact for it to be a common source for fakes.
Like with Pokémon cards for one example, Walmart in person stores have REAL cards, Walmart's online section however is riddled with fakes because of a Chinese business known as JoyBuy that is connected to Walmart and scams people out of hundreds of dollars worth of products they are faking.
That's just one example, but to assume racism, makes you the racist. The majority of people are not making a choice based on the person unless they are truly racist (but again you can't assume this), they're making the decision based on the product and the history with the product and those sources. Hope you do some research before throwing random out of you ass claims especially about things like racism.
"you are just resting" and "he is more senior than me" xD two elderly gentleman who work together since only god knows, still roasting eachother is always a good sign
All that cutting and all that chiseling with a key 10 of the detail and everything is hand done with nothing more than physical labor and hand tools and at his age congrats I hope he Continues to do what he loves
Great content! as the world crisis progresses the smartest thing people do lately is building a strong investment that isn’t controlled by the government. Like digital currencies.
Absolutely! Building a strong investment that isn’t controlled by the government is a smart move in todays unpredictable economy. digital assets offer a unique opportunity for financial independence.
Are individuals still holding crypto coin and stocks? I didn’t know that , I guess a few know about integrating into the micro economy to help substitute FIAT or usdt for a more tangible exchange Experience, it more like capitalization with about 43.307% profits/ ROI weekly though.. ps..Kimberly Jane Carl,got me covered!
"Hey everyone! 👋 Just starting my investment journey in crypto and stocks. 🚀 Learning the ropes and excited about the possibilities. Any tips or or info on how I’ll reach out to Kimberly Jane Carl,Let's grow together! 🌱
+1208
The reasons inkstones is much better than bottled ink. The ink stick can be exploited by the pressure on the inkstone. This means the fineness of ink particles can be controlled. The inksticks come in a huge variety of starting ingredients. The soot made from oil, pine or other trees, tar soot, lacquer soot, etc. This gives the ink variations in subtle tints from blue, purple to reddish and greenish. The glue used effects the body of the ink on the brush. How it interacts with water and the paper.
The older the inkstick the better it is. The molecular weight drops, which gives the ink a faster yet more controllable feel. The ink also sticks to the hair in a way, which always the brush to be far more sensitive. Especially when using very fine hair of high quality brushes. Bottled ink attacks the hair of the brushes, wearing them out quicker. Older ink does not dry out as quick, if it does, the rewetting doesn't cause uncontrolled streaking issues or rings. Inksticks over 15 years but generally more than twenty, does not go off in a day. It can ge kept up to two weeks and never stinks, unlike bottled ink which smells rancid after a day or two. Bottled ink is much more difficult to clean out of the brush. In the end inksticks are actually cheaper. Each can produce several gallons or more. Beware of poor quality inksticks and inkstones. Never buy inkstones based on name. Low quality stones can come from famous pits because of the limited supply. A good quality inkstick feels like fingernail. Oily, smooth yet a slightly sticky. Bever too heavy. Japanese and Koreans may lacquer and buff some types of inksticks. These are very shiny. Crisp details in design never sloppy. A hollow sound as an nkstick ages, when flicked with the finger. GoodCharacters out of California sells high quality Sam Yick brushes and a good colkection of inksticks.
This was fascinating to read! Thank you for sharing. :)
Two amazing artisans, and two valuable perspectives. How beautiful it is to devote oneself, mind and body, to this dying craft.
Thanks for watching!
Me: Is it because they’re made by a dwindling group of- [aging artisans who can’t find apprentices for a passion trade in this economy?]
Husband, who has seen the vid and heard me say this many times before: Yes.
Also demand. While it's expensive due to craftsmanship, not a lot really buy them. Mayne rich people or as expensive gifts. Why get one when manufactured ones, even plastic ones will suffice?
@@rickrollrizal well yes, capitalism indeed strips away all the craftsmanship out of producing stuff.
Business Insider be like "why is this [trade done as you describe] dying?"
@@rickrollrizalsaddening reality
The craftsman is using a Galaxy Flip 🤯
So it is true Korea is Samsung Land that even elderly are using a samsung smartphone
I found this so funny too. This grandpa carving stones by hand with a galaxy flip, truly the most korean thing ever!
I was about to comment on this too 😂 Not even a casual smartphone - a whole flip!
I'm glad someone mentioned it because ever since learning about the monopoly they hold over the country it makes you want to try spoting the company's chokehold everywhere. Not a phone you'd see an elderly person have in America usually that's for sure
only mostly elderly
the kids are gravitating towards the iphone
@@Goodmanperson55shows age maturity fr💀👍🏻
wow we finish the trinity we now know why calligraphy brushes, ink sticks, and ink stones are so expensive. What's next the calligraphy paper they're on?
Definitely 😂
Did you miss that one?
Close, a calligraphy desk made of sandalwood with ceramic accents
There is another one about how different ink blocks are made. It's also done by an older man. The work they do is amazing and I hope they teach/taught others so it doesn't become a lost art.
they already did a spotlight on the paper! it's mulberry paper aka hanji
I always love to see these craft works, it feels like doing things by hand, the old way, although more time consuming, it's best if you just want to "shut down" from society and focus only on doing your work.
Feels almost meditative.
Quality over quantity !!! That was the motto back in days now it’s all about cooperate greed ☹️!!
@@captainbananapants7211 Capitalism is all about profit, quality is "an optional cost".
I love that he has a Zflip 4
Something about watching a master artisan work is just so calming
I had an art teacher in middle school who had an ink stone. She did a whole unit about calligraphy. It was really cool.
I should have known but I didn't realize Koreans used ink stones as well. Great to see the difference between the Japanese and the Korean ink stone creation
ink stones are common across all countries with a tradition of chinese calligraphy
So he sells stones between $750 to $2200 because he's South Korean.
If he were Indian or Chinese no one would pay more than $20 a stone and max a $100 for larger and more engraved stone.
Business insider story telling I absolutely look forward to, its rich, spiritual and they spend time deeply connecting with the people they document. Lovely stuff 10/10
So he sells stones between $750 to $2200 because he's South Korean.
If he were Indian or Chinese no one would pay more than $20 a stone and max a $100 for larger and more engraved stone.
Guan yuku's dedication to crafting inkstones from natural red rock is truly admirable, showcasing the artistry and tradition behind calligraphy. The level of control and quality of ink these inkstones offer is unparalleled, making them a valuable tool for professional calligraphers. 🖋
I never even knew this a thing. Great video.
I like that caligrapher's views and explanations. They are tastefully sensational about their art, but without the BS and OVER sensationalization that comes with a lot of different art you see now a days (think "the blue dot on this otherwise plain white canvas is meant to show deep rooted depression" and crap like that).
So he sells stones between $750 to $2200 because he's South Korean.
If he were Indian or Chinese no one would pay more than $20 a stone and max a $100 for larger and more engraved stone.
@@MrUNCLESAM84Indians and Chinese take shortcuts to mass produce souvenirs and everyone knows it and that is why their work sells for a lot less. Anyone who puts a lot of work into a piece will not sell it for dirt cheap; the Indians and Chinese will simply not spend this much time on a single piece because there is no demand for such things in their respective markets. This guy is only able to sell these stones for that much because there is demand for them and he has a good reputation for doing excellent work.
Did we watch the same video?
Just because you don't understand art doesn't mean it has no meaning.
I love how these artisan and culture in general have created or keep alive crafts that are centuries old.
Cool story, sad business insider didn’t buy Vincent his first proper ink stone. Hopefully he can afford one in the future ❤️
"They"
@@chriskola3822 laymeow
@@chriskola3822 oh no its one of those crazy people
"They"
I feel like many of the steps in that process could be easily modernized without any drawbacks. But I guess the love he puts into every step is part of the deal
i was thinking the same thing. But, that commercialization would ruin it. Greed has ruined so much
There are plenty of mass-produced ink stones out there, too (the one Vincent Chong is using is probably one of them). This video is just showing you how one is made by a traditional craftsman.
Couldn't agree more, as a fashion designer knowing the true craft behind truly quality garments from all over the world, i can say for a fact that the more mechanised a system becomes, the lower the quality goes and the cheaper the prices. In the case of the fashion industry apprciation for the craft has died and all that remains is fast fashion and runways as we know them today. I'm not judging today's designers, merely stating that making something more automated and mechanised is not always a good thing.@w1-em4nq
My parents bought me one of those cheap mini calligraphy sets from Chinatown when I was a kid. Using the little ink stick on the stone felt like magic, even though I’d use it to draw pictures or hieroglyphics.
This is something I would love to learn!
This man is a true craftsman.
First, calligraphy brushes. Then, calligraphy ink sticks (from Business Insider India). Now, calligraphy inkstones. What’s next? The actual calligraphy process itself?
They included the process of calligraphy. Didn't you see Vincent acting like a chick while doing "contemporary" calligraphy? Kinda racist they used a deranged white man instead of a Korean master. But hey, they have to push the agenda...
They probably could do a video on why calligraphy is expensive (I wouldn't be surprised if this group can find calligraphy that costs >1000 USD). They'd probably focus on the whole production process for a mural or an exceptionally detailed seal stamp used on important legal documents.
I remember watching a video about how they make expensive ink sticks too lol
Why is there music let alone loud enough that it's hard to hear him? 😢😡
He’s not hard to hear though. You might want to see a doctor about your hearing
Some people have ripped jeans
Bro has a ripped shirt 💀💀
If you think that's torn , you should get a look at his bum hole.
The brush, the inkstick, and the stone are very expressive no wonder he can't effort new shirt.
@@fitrionoferi273literally says in the video he doesn’t even have one of the stones. Totally worthless addition to this video
@@brockjohnson100 But how would have they added the gay stuff?
RUclips mods are going in hard in this comment section
Because I was going to say it. Korea is conservative yet they added 🏳️🌈? Maybe we got a different documentary version than them 😭
@@n.g.l. Yeah, the gay stuff was totally useless and unneeded.
Exactly! Artisans know and appreciate the work of other Artisans.
Seeing the process of making calligraphy ink sticks, brushes, and now ink stones I’m now anticipating the upload of a video looking into the process of making calligraphy paper to complete the collection!
There are a lot. I think there is a video of making Vietnamese tradtional paper, which is of course pretty much the same as Chinese, Korean or Japanese, on this channel.
Wish you would not crap the videos up with background music.
@NO-background-music-in-videos
(😁 love the handle)
Thank you. I said the same thing. Her voice is very low timbre and that music almost completely drowns her out.
👍👌👏 Oh WOW, simply fantastic! I use "modern" Calligraphy pens and steel feathers with common ink (mostly green because it's my favourite colour) to write letters and postcards. Unfortunately I can't use ink and inkstones like the ones in the documentary/documentation.
Thanks a lot for making teaching explaining recording editing uploading and sharing.
Best regards luck and especially health to all involved people.
Do anything the hard way and it automatically makes it expensive
It also makes it done the classic way. If something is done with modern power tools it’s just not the same. You want something fancy like this… we’ll all that labour and a lifetime of skill costs money… otherwise there are cheaper options.
Trade skills have always been profitable, even more so these days as more and more people don’t bother and instead pay someone else to do it for them
@@koro_kokoro "Classic" doesn't automatically equate to better, though. Often times it's just extra laborious for the sake of being extra laborious.
@@-Devy- it does when you get things BECAUSE it’s done the old fashioned way. And guess what, all that time and a lifetime of skill costs money… and quality things always do. If you want mass produced garbage of course you will pay less
Would have been interesting to hear from an artisan who uses the product you did this video about
They did. The calligrapher was using an ink stone. They covered the artisan makes them in many sizes.
@@sinisterthoughts2896 the video explicitly says that the calligrapher they interviewed did not use inkstones crafted by the artisans they interviewed.
Just two buddies cutting rocks with a hand saw, exactly as it should be!
Is the background music far too loud to be enjoyable?
No. See a doctor for your hearing
@doomedbringer right. See the doc because I'm hearing too well.
@@UraTrowelie I mean I heard the guy just fine and you’re the one unable to hear the guy. So it’s clearly a you problem. Your hearing must be awful
The Handmade Inkstone creation so much Appreciated !❤🖌❤! Thank You for showing these masterpieces !👌
The strange guy at the end didn't even use anything, made by hand in Korea........ You are telling me the Korean guy that makes them couldn't point you in a direction to someone who actually use the fancy stuff??? last half of the video just felt out of place. "you know, like, its just rocks. It's like, weird." Not sure what any of that guy actually added to the video. He used a clay dish and poured bottled ink. Shame we didn't get to see one of the big beautiful ones get used and actually get to watch them mix the ink and then be used in the traditional way.... You guys did the traditional side very dirty. Could of at least included that too
Art like this is rare, and is beautiful, machines will never achieve this. It's sad that many trades like these are dying out
someone get this man a bandsaw
That point it’s done right without any of that. Just because a way is easier doesn’t mean it’s better
@@koro_kokoro as a stone sculptor, everything else he does by hand makes total sense to me. Not how I would do it but I respect the level of control he's able to exercise by doing it with hand tools. But he's crazy not to be using a bandsaw for the first steps; no one, including the artisan, would be able to see any difference in the finished product after cutting it with a bandsaw vs cutting it with a hand saw.
The man just wants to train his upper back with his bro
Better buy him a waterjet cutting machine.
5his channel surely gets a paycheck from japan if this was india they would had definetly shown unnecessary things 🙄 😅 i dont get why are they so expensive 😅
You couldn’t find someone who uses the artisans meticulously crafted item?
ESG brownie points.
Hi. My self bandari gopalakrishna from India, living in Hyderabad. My father is a drawing artist. Now no more. Excellent artist. In school and arts college JNTU. School from All saints High' school. Hyd. He learned few signatures from Printed Books . He purchased several books and art formation. Brushes. Your video is very inspiring us. Good and health works.
Thank you sar
Real craftsmanship right there
Wow that Vincent has no idea what he is saying.
Yet he thinks he sounds so smart.
And then he shaves his arms.
If Vincent is going to buy my $2000 rock, I’ll use whatever pronouns Vincent wants
That bald dude used every multi syllable word he knew and sounded like he was confusing himself lol
Bro ur so right. In my opinion he ruined the video in a way.
I think its wonerous that we can begin to see the dedication and art of other asian cultures. Usually its always japan, and thats cool. However i often wondered what kind of extreme craftsmanship exists in places like south korea. I hope you guys cover many more of these types of stories.
Keep up the material like this
Moving and working on those rocks AT that age.. man thats crazy 🥶
Gorgeous!
What type of stone is it? It almost looks like a slate .
That's what I'm wondering. Some type of iron rich sandstone, I'd guess by the color, and that it's clearly sedimentary.
verrucano
Such beautiful and amazing traditions in this world. Protect and support them.
i think it's the first time i see someone that owns a galaxy flip.
Bro can't find a shirt without hole for an interview......
Don t you have seen his nails?os clearly an alternative intellectual😂😂😂😂😂😂
Dude’s a loser… what do you expect?
.... shirt is the least of his problems.
His tattered shirt identifies as a tuxedo. 😂
So awesome, i really do hope he has someone or more than one person to hand it down to otherwise it will be a dying art form
wtf is this shot 10:10, lmao cameraman need to chill
First the ink, the brushes, and now this.
Who are they ?? 😭😭😭
Can we experience the beauty and raw artistry of an artisan making an ink stone without having your agenda forcefully pushed on us? These shows are no longer educational or enjoyable-they've turned into a vehicle for indoctrination.
what does this have to do with queer and trans? why does it have to be connected to that....
What was the point of showing someone who doesn't even use this traditional ink stone? It adds nothing to the video. We want to hear someone who actually has experience with it
Because he's a transformer and it's the woke thing to do...
He did look like a bit of a weirdo
@@ethenjennings5800 Par for the course.
He’s a transgender that’s why
I've got no idea why he was in the video either. Really jarring against the backdrop of this master artisan demonstrating his traditional craft.
I'm going to be on TV, as a specialist in the field... Now...Where's my shirt with the holes in it?
Why did they choose to interview some random roller blader who didn’t even use an ink stone like the ones the craftsman makes? Just to shove in propaganda?
Damn, Vincent did make this about themselves. For a split second I hope they wouldn’t do it. Such a different POV compared to Hyuk-su’s beautiful words about the art itself.
Bruh what
When I get rich imma have everything made by hand via an old asian man using olden day methods. My clothes, shoes, furniture, whatever can be done.
I hope you never do
In another shed they have a bandsaw and a 5 axis CNC, right now they are both drinking beer and laughing that they got BI to buy it while counting money like Tony Montana.
Who cares if the student is gay. It has no baring on the inkstone. People of the 1st world have soft lives. This why who you sleep with, outshines the artist hand making every part of the inkstone. Merit means nothing to ideologues.
The gay stuff was unnecessary and didn't add anything to the story. The dude with the ripped shirt didn't even have one.
Criticizing him for being gay is unnecessary but yk the internet is how it is but there is some good points that the largely Asian art is being talked about by some random white guy who seemingly does not know what he’s talking about
What's the basis of Vincent's claim that queer and trans people have been at the center of art for all of human history? You can't just brush aside the total lack of evidence by saying "erasure". I get that this video isn't focused on that question, but that line shouldn't have made it into the final edit.
Very subliminal how they slid that in there....agenda has to make it no matter what....coz they couldn't find an Asian artisan could they??
cry about it
I appreciate that they included that line
Misinformation to push their subversive agenda.
@@jblade8028bro, read the room. People are sick of your community making everything about yourselves.
you have to love doing this for a living otherwise the quality wouldnt be there...and these 2 guys wouldnt put this effort in to do this form of art the old way...
Very Amazing
Why my whole body are so expensive?
These days, there's plenty of ways to make money. Are you one of them?
I'm impressed. Not a single mention to climate change. Finally!
What annoyed me the most was when he mentioned Queer and Trans people. Like bro where does that even come into the equation.
Narcissism.
It's part of that person's own artistic connection to calligraphy, certainly it's not universal for all calligraphers but I don't think they were trying to speak on behalf of all calligraphers. They were most likely asked a personal question by the interviewer and they answered it personally.
such a cute old man
Using dremel is like McDonald
Beautiful work from both the ink stone artisan and the calligrapher - love that they could have chosen any modern artist who is continuing the craft and they specifically showed a trans person who is working their way up from using the affordable version of the traditional inkstone to one day be in a position to afford the more expensive elaborate stones that this video shows the inkstone artisan making! The respect for the craft is amazing to see from both perspectives
Disagree. They've used a man for virtue signalling, ignoring artists that better demonstrate the skill and tradition.
What does being trans or queer have to do with this
If you don’t connect to art, that’s a reflection of you. Art evolves and grows with each artist. When you don’t understand a connection, this is an opportunity to learn
@@heyustabbedme and when you don't understand that modern world political agendas have nothing to do with each individual's perception of art, you get to learn something as well. the queer kid was out of place in this video.
@@2pointSummer all art is political, and contemporary art pushes the envelope. If you’re uncomfortable, that’s a reflection on you
Why are you triggered bro
Absolutely nothing.
Cringe
its about the individuality and the soul... the soul being put into an artform is a dieing thing making so much in say for example, music.... a dead form as its only ever for the money now in as fast a thing as possable. there is no flow anymore, no one is creative anymore. but this... that last little bit of creativity left in the big grand thing in the biggest picture of things. we need more daring people willing tp throw caution to the wayside, just like how the 1990s seen the biggest eletronic boom in such a short time thats still driving us to keep bettering tech.
Had me till the end there.
Quality ⚡
would have great to hear from someone that actually used the inkstones instead of going out of your way to virtue signal.
Tf you yapping about?
Bingo. Can't escape this siht these days.
u guys just had to put thatcreep in this video god damn
Sorry BI. I’m a city girl and I’ve seen a whetstone. Is it something uncommon? My dad has always had one.
South Koreans & Japanese are both excellent craftsmen. It's wonderful seeing them put their differences aside and come together for the greater good of the civilized free world. America couldn't ask for better partners! 🇺🇸🇯🇵🇰🇷
video was great until that guy with nail appeared
"Rocks have been around a long time." -Vincent.
Forgive him, he's a calligrapher not a geologist or poet😊
Yeah, he was talking a bunch of BS by trying to sound smart.
@@slawdawg23 you'd think people would have realized that doesn't work but they keep on doing it lol
Makes you appreciate
Appreciate what?! He sells stones between $750 to $2200 because he's South Korean.
If he were Indian or Chinese no one would pay more than $20 a stone and max a $100 for larger and more engraved stone.
Do some research on the process or any other hand made crafting and you will get it.
@@kristina5679 bought a straight razor couple of years ago, hand made "supposedly" in America Damascus steel from a blacksmith in Missouri, paid $700 for it and I'm not going to lie it's a piece of art, I didn't even use it I kept it in it's box to preserve it.
Last November I was talking about it to a friend of mine, his family is originally from Pakistan and he told me that his uncle can make the exact same one for me if we showed it to him, long story short we video called his uncle and he said I can make it for $200 and I told him get outta here, his uncle reply was simply "challenge accepted" so we sent him a dozen pictures of the razor and hanged up.
A month later my friend comes to my house with an unopened tape wrapped box that came in the mail to his address, we open the box and in there the razor with a flash drive that contains 5 hours and 42 minutes video of his uncle recording how he made it from scratch, and when he said hand made he meant it literally, he didn't use a hydraulic hammer nor electric sander, just his hand tools in a very simple "primitive" shop.
I paid him $300 instead of the $200 and I'm using the semi hand "American" made razor now and preserving my $200 fully hand made Pakistani real piece of art.
So trust me it's all about where and who worked on the item that been fabricated
this is not what i mean when i said I'm a professional stoner.
Pastel with bold black otlines 😊😊😊
Of course you had to make it about that topic again at the end.
cry about it
They can't not impose the w0ke bilge and insert it somewhere in the vid.
Siht never ends in 2024.
Why would calligraphers choose to use this ancient method? Uhm, they’re calligraphers… that’s why.
why is a single dude referred as a they?
THE BACKGROUND MUSIC IS TOO LOUD!
Sorry~the background music is too loud.
Plus the narrator's low timbre voice makes it difficult to hear her.
I tuned on CC but it covered much of the video~turn it down, please!! I was really, really interested in this video, but that LOUD music made it frustrating.
That “artist” was weird af
am I the only one surprised he has a flip phone?
Vincent ruined the video. He shit on that old man’s craft cause he wanted to be special for no special reason. Next…
I have one of those
Part of me wants to ask where are they hiding the dremel lol
I am curious, could the shavings and chipped pieces of the stones be sold and repurposed, maybe somehow turned into a clay to be made into cheaper inkstones? Obviously the additive of using binders to turn the dust into a clay would lower the quality, I just wonder if there is potential in something like that.
.
It is just disrespectful to put these respectable traditional craftsmen in the same video as some random western dude
Cultural appropriation is OK as long it's not by straight white males /s