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Cleaning Brush Tawashi Slim L | Kishu Shuro

Sale priceSFr. 16.00

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  • Material: Shuro (Trachycarpus fortune - windmill palm) bark fibre, stainless steel
  • .
  • Dimension: 5.5 x 3 x 16cm (length x width x height)
  • Weight: 40g
  • organic cultivation method.
  • Handmade in Japan
TAKADA - Tawashi Shuro Mehrzweck Küchenbürste Handmade in Japan
Cleaning Brush Tawashi Slim L | Kishu Shuro Sale priceSFr. 16.00

Beschreibung

Tawashi - narrow multi-purpose kitchen brush for gentle cleaning of all kinds.

The bark of the windmill palm, also called SHURO, has always been a familiar material to the Japanese, whose flexible and soft texture is used for brooms and scrubbing brushes, called "TAWASHI" in Japanese.

The fresh bark of the KISHU SHURO has a fine sheen and uniform fibres. Takada Kozo Shoten uses the finest materials for selected products such as body brushes.

Despite outward appearances, the brushes are surprisingly soft and therefore suitable for bathing as well as scrubbing fruits and vegetables, providing a gentle, pleasant and invigorating skin sensation.

    Story

    Tawashi are traditional Japanese scrub brushes made from the fibres of the windmill palm. For centuries, these types of brushes have been used in Japan to clean pots and dishes. With over seventy years of experience, the specialised artisans have honed their skills in making tawashi scrub brushes piece by piece. They have learned to source materials from trees grown in Wakayama Prefecture, whose bristles are much softer than palm fibres grown in other regions of the world. Despite their stiff appearance, these bristles, which are found only in Japan, are surprisingly gentle, making them perfect for cleaning fruit and vegetables as well as for bathing. When used as a body cleansing brush, dry or wet, Tawashi leave a pleasant, invigorating feeling on the skin.

    Carefully selected, high-quality materials and traditional craftsmanship are the two essential ingredients that make up all our brushes. From a purely business perspective, it would undoubtedly be more efficient to manufacture the brushes by machine. But customers trust and rely on Takada products every day and expect them to last for decades. From this perspective, Takada is convinced that the past must provide the answers. Brushes are made by people for people - it has always been that way and it will always be that way. This is the commitment that Takada Kozo Shoten has carried with her for seventy years and that she will pass on to the next generation.

    In the past, Wakayama was a major producer of windmill palms, a mainstay of the local economy. But production has been drastically curtailed by cheaper imported windmill palms and substitute products such as oil palms. With fewer and fewer farmers to take care of them, windmill palm forests nationwide have shrunk dramatically. Takada believes that the first step to preserving this traditional industry for future generations is to protect the existing windmill palm forests in Wakayama. To this end, Takada has embarked on a project to nurture this important natural resource and have been growing high quality windmill palms for many years. From these, they select only the highest quality materials to make our body brushes. For your kitchen brushes and brooms, where durability is paramount, you use imported windmill palm fibres, known for their stronger, stiffer bristles.

    All Takada Kozo Shoten products comply with the following European Community Regulation:

    (EC) No 1935/2004 OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND OF THE COUNCIL materials and articles intended to come into contact with food.

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    Die Story zu TAKADA | Japanese Cleaning Brushes

    story

    The Japanese Tawashi brush is a traditional household brush made by hand from organic plant fibers. Earlier versions of the brush were made (between 1603 and 1868) from rice straw, but the current design - from 1907 - uses fibers from windmill palms and coconut trees. The waterproof fibers are curved for durability and are held in place by a metal wire that snakes down the middle of a long end, forming a built-in hook for convenient storage.

    Because the tawashi brush has been a common product in Japanese households for hundreds of generations, the term "tawashi" is used loosely to refer to various forms of scrub brushes.

    The material

    And like every great craft tradition, the Japanese one is also suffering from the influence of more modern materials. Still preserving the old and tried and tested: Takada Tawanashi dedicates himself to a special aspect of this tradition: Japanese brush making - and its special material: the fibers of the Chinese hemp palm. Chinese now, because you can hardly find them in Japan anymore and hardly anyone knows how to harvest and process their fibers. In contrast, quite a few people in the Kishū province, Wakayama Prefecture, once lived from the palm trees there, simply called Shuro - today Japanese fibers have become a real rarity. We know it as the Ticino palm, but it is native to where these brushes come from: carefully and entirely handcrafted, robust and stable. And at the same time incredibly delicate and fine, so that they do not leave any scratches even on sensitive surfaces. On top of that, they are completely food-safe.

    Cleanliness - related to spatial hygiene, personal hygiene and mental purity - is one of the highest virtues in Japan.


    Mehr zu TAKADA | Japanese Cleaning Brushes

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