The lady who cuts my hair dropped her scissors and ruined them for cutting hair. She told me they were made in Japan, and cost over $500. I don't know what company made them, though.
Анахронизм, прогресс не остановить, но я рад что столько рабочих находят место для применения своих усилий, и им хватает денег на жизнь, надеюсь с женщиной и детьми.
Интересно сколько должны стоить ножницы чтобы хотя бы в "0" выходить с такими трудозатратами, столько людей и техники и столько времени для "доводки" одного экземпляра...
Now I understand why good hair cutting scissors are so expensive. They are produced with the precision required for a piece of classy costume jewellery.
They may be $200.00 scissors, but if you do 10 haircuts a day, 5-days a week, after a month, your cost per cut is $1.00. After 1 year it is down to $0.08, and after 10 years it is less than a penny a cut, essentially zero cost. Those scissors, with proper care including weekly light sharpening and a daily drop of oil on the hinge should last that long. We have a pair of U.S.A. Made Wiss # 457 1/2 high carbon steel inlaid forged scissors that we have been using for in-home haircuts for over 40 years. They will outlast me. Pay for quality, it saves you money in the long run.
Wonderful to see craftsmanship like this. I'm curious to know the retail cost of such products. I know hairdressing scissors aren't cheap and rightly so when you see the process.
A lot. The sister of my ex-boyfriend is a hairdresser. When she just finished hairdressing school, she had those 'cheap' German and Chinese scissors. Around the time when she finally started her own salon, she gotten a set of Japanese scissors she bought at a special store. The cheapest pair was around 600 euros.
@@PaulodeMelo ohhhh i see! i totally just dismissed that thought that they will only quench after the scissor is formed, but they quenched the plates instead
Здравствуйте. Я из Казахстана подписан на вас могли в начале рассказать про цех размер количество сотрудников и тд и как куда сбывается продукция. Спасибо 🙏🏽
Мне кажется для простоты производства, можно было закаливать полностью всю заготовку, а не отдельно только лезвия. Сомневаюсь что там такие ударные нагрузки что нужна упругость мягкой стали.
Most crazy process I've ever seen. Unnecessary action, unnecessary machinery etc etc. Don't say that the scissors from Solingen are worse. Typical Japan..... tradition😉
Actually it is considered "mass production". By definition, mass production is the manufacturing of large quantities of standardized products, often using assembly lines OR automation technology. The standard product is the scissor and although there doesn't appear to be a lot of "automation" and requires very skilled workers at each station, it most definitely gets made by going down an assembly process from one station to the next which is known as assembly line in manufacturing (not all assembly lines are continuous straight lines on conveyor belts). If something isn't "mass" produced, then it would be considered bespoked (custom) meeting the needs of each unique customer.
More than half of the processes is not displayed. Very sad. I wonder why don't they buy sheet metal of the desired thickness instead of rolling. And why do they weld two pieces instead of making it from one workpiece.
0:41 That puzzled me too, so I watched the start again. They actually show that the piece they are annealing and rolling is a composite (laminated) piece, probably a thick piece of mild steel, and a thin sheet of carbon steel. If you look closely, you can see that the edges have hot edges where they welded the two plates together. I think they might have a bit of borax between the plates, so that they bind completely together during the forging that takes place between the rollers. It is thought-provoking that they use so many working steps for this, rather than using the same e.g. vanadium tool steel for the whole scissor, so perhaps the hard strip is a very fine steel, such as vg 10 or similar.😊
They don't just buy random plate steel, this company is the actual inventor of the highly regarded ATS-314 steel, considered one of the best steels used in the production of hair scissors. The process you are watching is the "forging" process of this steel plate. Although the desired thickness of the piece is important, the purpose of the rolling is to refine the grain of the steel and remove defects, creating a denser steel with optimal properties for it's intended use... in this case, hard enough to hold an extremely sharp edge without being brittle, and malleable enough to be able to set (hammer) the needed arc in each blade, adjust handles, etc. The two piece design is considered superior to a one piece design. The processing benefits are that you can have multiple choices of handle designs and blade designs, instead of having to make a separate mold for each individual scissor. Also, the blade steel requires different properties that are not an advantage in handles, so the two piece design allows the use of two different steels... in the end you are left with a highly tunable tool, that in the hands of a correctly trained sharpener , can last for years.
@@Р.С-п8у да как вам сказать . крахаборы ... сваривают кольца из дешовой стали с лезвиями из дорогой . кругом накрутка человекочасов при производстве обычных бытовых предметов , доводящих их цену до золотой .
@@dunay1971 Вообще то это не бытовые ножницы, а парикмахерские. Цена может доходить до четверти миллиона рублей. А рукоятки и не должны быть слишком твердыми, иначе их не отрегулировать.
This company appears to do contract manufacturing and doesn't actually sell the scissors on the retail market. Does anyone know which brand(s) have their scissors made here?
職人さんが使うための専用の道具を、職人さんが作ってる。。。すごい。。。
当たり前のことで草
Amazing craftsmanship and precision! The machinery that makes the parts is pretty amazing too.
You can feel the pride they take in their work.
Wow. Those are some NICE scissors. A lot of hand crafting. They must be pretty pricey.
Nah, look at the headline ..... MASS PRODUCED
The lady who cuts my hair dropped her scissors and ruined them for cutting hair. She told me they were made in Japan, and cost over $500. I don't know what company made them, though.
荒打ちのプレスされた後ぺって落とされるの好き
The craftsman spirit of semi-automatic polishing is admirable
Amazing. Such care and attention to detail.
Спасибо всем, кто делает эти великолепные ножницы!
Автору этого видео отдельное спасибо!
これは道具ではない。芸術だ。
フツーに道具やろ
@@下痢男-g5q 心をまっさらにして、ロマンに耳を澄ませてみるんだ兄弟。
ほら、芸術の足音だ
@@mykey308 すまない。荒んだ心に響いてだぜ。ブラザー。
Анахронизм, прогресс не остановить, но я рад что столько рабочих находят место для применения своих усилий, и им хватает денег на жизнь, надеюсь с женщиной и детьми.
Интересно сколько должны стоить ножницы чтобы хотя бы в "0" выходить с такими трудозатратами, столько людей и техники и столько времени для "доводки" одного экземпляра...
@@Oleg_19 Загуглите... До четверти миллиона рублей может цена доходить.
Nice sharing👍👍👍👍👍👍
Japanese care for quality and details ❤️💕💕☺️
Beautiful. Absolute Japanese perfection.
Quality work..
+ Бедный маникен, столько волос потерял )))
最後の試し切り用のマネキンで笑ったわw
Now I understand why good hair cutting scissors are so expensive. They are produced with the precision required for a piece of classy costume jewellery.
Are you being sarcastic?
I didn't understand how it made financial sense but then looked them up and they are 200 dollar scissors.
They may be $200.00 scissors, but if you do 10 haircuts a day, 5-days a week, after a month, your cost per cut is $1.00. After 1 year it is down to $0.08, and after 10 years it is less than a penny a cut, essentially zero cost. Those scissors, with proper care including weekly light sharpening and a daily drop of oil on the hinge should last that long. We have a pair of U.S.A. Made Wiss # 457 1/2 high carbon steel inlaid forged scissors that we have been using for in-home haircuts for over 40 years. They will outlast me. Pay for quality, it saves you money in the long run.
@@charlesward8196 so true man. Some people never learn that valuable lesson. Quality is always cheaper in the long run.
Good tradesman quality scissors and knife is expensive. I don't know much about scissors but a sashimi knife (for cutting raw fish) easily costs $600.
Người Nhật rất giỏi,thật ngưỡng ngộ.❤❤❤❤❤❤
こんにちは、車のフィルター、センサー、ブレーキディスクを製造する工場を見つけるにはどうすればよいですか?
名品!!!
Best of Best 👍
Terima kasih perkongsian video nya sahabat 👍👍
コメントは海外からが殆どですね!。
Parabéns excelente trabalho.
Um grande abraço de Portugal.
他の刃物と異なり鍛造することはなく、プレスでの型抜きで、磨きの工程が多いのですね。
That slight curve on the edge of the scissors… made by hand…
Wonderful to see craftsmanship like this. I'm curious to know the retail cost of such products. I know hairdressing scissors aren't cheap and rightly so when you see the process.
A lot. The sister of my ex-boyfriend is a hairdresser. When she just finished hairdressing school, she had those 'cheap' German and Chinese scissors. Around the time when she finally started her own salon, she gotten a set of Japanese scissors she bought at a special store. The cheapest pair was around 600 euros.
@@YaoiMastah It seems that Japanese hairdressing scissors are good.
@@makingprocessindynamickore8549 Not just good. They're superior.
соединительный болт невнятно показали. Там есть подшипник?
Yes made in Japan 🇯🇵
잘 보고 배우고 갑니다.
감사 합니다.🙇♂️
세계 제일에 장인을 꿈꾸며.
그만!
Chất thép của Nhật Bản thì có ai bằng 🇯🇵. Người Nhật rất cần cù chịu khó làm ăn 🇯🇵👍.
I love Japan🇯🇵🇯🇵❤️❤️
nice video 👍
これ1本数万円するからなぁ、まぁ納得やわ
このBGMすごい眠くなる
In where I live, hairdressers I know swears by Japanese scissors.
You really had to play that 2 second music sequence during all 11 minutes of this video?
Beautiful video....
I thought that the scissors needed to undergo quneching, but seems like these doesn't require that
It seems they do go through quenching. Turn ON the captions at around 3:30
@@PaulodeMelo ohhhh i see! i totally just dismissed that
thought that they will only quench after the scissor is formed, but they quenched the plates instead
best ones use ice hardening Friodur®
ما شاء الله إبداع
So wird ein Qualitätsprodukt hergestellt. Made in Japan.
Здравствуйте. Я из Казахстана подписан на вас могли в начале рассказать про цех размер количество сотрудников и тд и как куда сбывается продукция. Спасибо 🙏🏽
대단해요
good workmanship ,but non of them wearing eye protection ,so much for health and safety and employee care
쇠뭉치가 정교한 가위가 되는 과정이 정말 신기하네요!
Мне кажется для простоты производства, можно было закаливать полностью всю заготовку, а не отдельно только лезвия. Сомневаюсь что там такие ударные нагрузки что нужна упругость мягкой стали.
А обратили внимание на момент где мастер подстраивает ключом 3х точечным ушко ножниц - на закаленной стали этого не сделать.
@@СергейГубенков-с1у интересно, спасибо
Around 750 to 850 usd the pair of scissors that most likely will last a lifetime. "Affordable" for a professional, less for the average joe
This is interesting, but as usual they don’t introduce the employees.
Japanese companies treat their workers like nameless robots.
Me want haircut with these scissors
They definitely don't cut corners
Pakistanis and Indians pay attention; this is how it's done.
제품이 아름답다라는 생각이 드네요
Где можно найти средства для строительства такого производства в республике Узбекистан ?
Handcrafted is what I would call them not mass produced.
Я думал там роботы и лазеры...
А там сидят япошки и фигачат :)
Это потому что у тебя одна извилина, да и та почти прямая.
такие ножницы стоят наверное как крыло боинга
my barber bought a pair of insanely expensive japanes scissors -dont remember what brand- but wont use anything else now
7:10 rough handle polish bit and then switch to ground and swivel pin punch, where is that part 🙃
how to make pigmen colour, from what painting colour matter?
Most crazy process I've ever seen. Unnecessary action, unnecessary machinery etc etc. Don't say that the scissors from Solingen are worse. Typical Japan..... tradition😉
How much for scissor ✂️ ??
Kann man ihre Produkte auch in Deutschland kaufen?
Landepe🤔
Go easy on that mannequin. Someone’s already butchered her hair enough! 🤦🏻♀️
🥰🥰🥰🥰🇵🇭
BRAZIL 🇧🇷🇧🇷
プロセスX👍👍👍
1등 ㅋ
Giá bán thế nào
It's not really mass production, is it?
Actually it is considered "mass production". By definition, mass production is the manufacturing of large quantities of standardized products, often using assembly lines OR automation technology. The standard product is the scissor and although there doesn't appear to be a lot of "automation" and requires very skilled workers at each station, it most definitely gets made by going down an assembly process from one station to the next which is known as assembly line in manufacturing (not all assembly lines are continuous straight lines on conveyor belts). If something isn't "mass" produced, then it would be considered bespoked (custom) meeting the needs of each unique customer.
More than half of the processes is not displayed. Very sad.
I wonder why don't they buy sheet metal of the desired thickness instead of rolling. And why do they weld two pieces instead of making it from one workpiece.
Looks like the blades and handles are of different thickness and different types of steel so they are produced separately
@@DatNguyen-et1mi they are forging it anyways, you can easily achieve a different thickness by forging
0:41 That puzzled me too, so I watched the start again. They actually show that the piece they are annealing and rolling is a composite (laminated) piece, probably a thick piece of mild steel, and a thin sheet of carbon steel. If you look closely, you can see that the edges have hot edges where they welded the two plates together. I think they might have a bit of borax between the plates, so that they bind completely together during the forging that takes place between the rollers. It is thought-provoking that they use so many working steps for this, rather than using the same e.g. vanadium tool steel for the whole scissor, so perhaps the hard strip is a very fine steel, such as vg 10 or similar.😊
They don't just buy random plate steel, this company is the actual inventor of the highly regarded ATS-314 steel, considered one of the best steels used in the production of hair scissors. The process you are watching is the "forging" process of this steel plate. Although the desired thickness of the piece is important, the purpose of the rolling is to refine the grain of the steel and remove defects, creating a denser steel with optimal properties for it's intended use... in this case, hard enough to hold an extremely sharp edge without being brittle, and malleable enough to be able to set (hammer) the needed arc in each blade, adjust handles, etc.
The two piece design is considered superior to a one piece design. The processing benefits are that you can have multiple choices of handle designs and blade designs, instead of having to make a separate mold for each individual scissor. Also, the blade steel requires different properties that are not an advantage in handles, so the two piece design allows the use of two different steels... in the end you are left with a highly tunable tool, that in the hands of a correctly trained sharpener , can last for years.
결국 거의 수작업이자너…ㄷㄷ
일본은 뭔가 장인 정신으로 만드는 것 같네요 이런 건 보고 배웠으면 합니다
レノア
I own one made by nazi. 20 years and still good
مفيش٠رجل٠اعمال٠ينقل٠هذه٠الصناعه٠عندنا٠يشغل٠عمال٠ويوفر٠دولارت
The intro that previews all the steps ruins the suspense for me
いつも思うのは
もっと機械の音や金属の擦れる音、叩く音を聞きたいのに
音楽がジャマなんだよなぁ
海外のコメント多いから外国の人への配慮かな?
アメリカだったか映画でもアニメでもポルノでも音楽が鳴ってない時間があると不安になる人が多いとか
なんか論文的なの読んだ気がするから
音楽無しバージョンもアップしてほしいなぁ
👍🇮🇩🇮🇩🇮🇩🇮🇩🇮🇩🇮🇩🇮🇩
研ぎの人手荒れきつそう
режущую кромку делают вручную , на глаз . чпушный станок не нужен .
Эстеты))
Ручная работа... больших денег стоит...
@@Р.С-п8у да как вам сказать . крахаборы ... сваривают кольца из дешовой стали с лезвиями из дорогой . кругом накрутка человекочасов при производстве обычных бытовых предметов , доводящих их цену до золотой .
@@dunay1971 Вообще то это не бытовые ножницы, а парикмахерские. Цена может доходить до четверти миллиона рублей. А рукоятки и не должны быть слишком твердыми, иначе их не отрегулировать.
This company appears to do contract manufacturing and doesn't actually sell the scissors on the retail market. Does anyone know which brand(s) have their scissors made here?
作る工程とはいえ部材を投げるのは。。。嫌です。
理容師、美容師は凄くハサミを大切にします。
ですからいくら完成していないからと投げるのは嫌です。
Интересно, но не все операции показаны !!! Мастер по заточке ножниц, из Сибири !!!
Видимо это коммерческая тайна )))
look perfect :o