Some of you have noticed my recent absence from KGS. If he gives me a heads-up (and an authorization to release the info), you'll hear the latest on this blog. Pong continues to hint of some new items being added to their inventory in the upcoming months so I'll be checking their site every now and then. That's a wrap for this special article courtesy of Pong! If you'd like to see the goban I had received from YMI back in December, you can head over to that previous post. In the foreground is a decorative Chinese-styled goban. In addition to shopping at their site, YMI also sells some of their inventory at auction on eBay. With the packaging of the gobans, Pong says that YMI is now adding 4cm and 6cm heavy gauge styrofoam packing around all the sides to prevent damage in transit to their customers. Pong mentions that YMI is now inspecting its equipment in its China warehouse before it is shipped to the US allowing them to reject unsatisfactory boards. According to Pong, the Yunan Go Factory provides boards to The Go Gamestore as well. Here are stacks of finished boards which will be part of YMI's upcoming inventory. The former barracks of the Flying Tigers airmen now serves as the workers' on-site residences. Contrast this to the traditional method of using a modified sword edge. My understanding is that some modern Japanese goban manufacturers do use specialized drafting-style equipment to apply the ink for the lines. Here is the line-drawing expert applying the lines and star points by hand. I can't quite make out those markings on the center. They look like they were all cut from a single piece of wood.Ī finish is applied to what look like Chinese chess boards. Here, we see a stack of unfinished boards. This part of the compound is the former horse stable of the Flying Tigers. This is where the table lines are drawn, and where the paint and finish are applied. That seems to be a turning lathe in the background.Īlthough this photo is blurry, you can clearly see the tiles of the bath house.Īfter the boards are properly dried, they are ready to be painted. Here's a close-up of the unfinished bowls. This is the shop storage for floorboard legs after they have been carved. Here's a close-up of a floorboard leg being carved. Here is another photo of the carving process using a broad array of chisels and a carvers' mallet. This photo provides a close-up of a panel which will be added to a Chinese-styled floor board. The carving is a time-consuming and highly-skilled craft. This is a sample of one of the reliefs that are carved in the workshop. It is now used for carving go bowls, board legs and reliefs for decorative floor gobans. This is the former bath house of the Flying Tigers. Here, a worker is sanding off some boards. This is the shed where they make the fine cuts for the boards from blocks to actual board size. Pong had expressed concerns about how heavier gobans could sustain in-transit damage when I once suggested that YMI should carry a 22cm goban that I had seen online. This is too large and heavy for YMI to import at this time. The standard thickness of a floor goban in China is 20cm. The wood is dried in storage through convection for up to ten years depending on the thickness of the cut. YMI does not currently carry boards from these woods. Boards made from these are very expensive and highly prized in Japan. They are illegal to cut down in China but are allowed to be imported from other countries. These are old Kaya trees several hundred years old and from Burma. Chenault's Flying Tigers fighter squadron outside of Kunming in Yunnan province. The Yunnan Go Factory is on the former airbase of Claire L. He had promised me photos from the Yunnan Go Factory and he sent me several. Pong Yen from Yellow Mountain Imports is now in Shanghai after a long trip down to Southern China. What does a P-40 warbird have to do with Go? Read on!
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |