Washi: The Japanese paper crafted to last 1000 years [video]

bbc.com

112 points by rmason 4 days ago


paulgerhardt - 15 hours ago

I’ve recently thrown out all my masking tape (crepe paper) in favor of Washi tape (rice/mulberry paper with a 3M adhesive). I use Blue Dolphin for house painting and Nichiban for airbrushing. Very nice quality of life upgrade.

Masking tape would bleed or lift paint. (Even frog tape). 10x reduction in these problems since switching to washi.

geuis - 13 hours ago

This material is highly prized in art conservation. If you ever watch Baumgartner painting restoration videos on YouTube, he frequently uses this or another similar paper to securely but lightly adhere to a painting's surface while he's working to stabilize it from the the back. May seem like a waste of rare paper but it serves an excellent purpose for that niche but important craft.

More importantly, this video is too short. It doesn't talk about why this paper can last a thousand years other than saying that it has.

Also I think the UK host gets short shrift. I really want to know his story. That on its own would be super interesting.

swatson741 - 9 hours ago

The Japanese paper culture is pretty wild. They use them to make fusuma (sliding doors), decorative strips, gift wrapping, etc. And like they say in the report they've done this since forever. There was once a time in history when the rest of the world was stuck using solid shutters instead of superior paper windows.

BTW the reporter looks like Cotten Hill if he was real, and actually fought in all those wars. I'm quite surprised they had him hosting the video. I'm curious what decisions led to this.

Brajeshwar - 14 hours ago

Washi is a method or process of paper making tradition from Japan. I stumbled on it when I fell in love with Midori Papers.

colechristensen - 16 hours ago

For some excellent content about Japan, block printmaking, washi paper, etc. check out David Bull on YouTube

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xUpLl7BZ_JY

bitwize - 16 hours ago

Fun fact: In Final Fantasy VII, there is an item called "Loco weed" that causes confusion. The name of the item in the Japanese release translates to "washi-wrapped weed", indicating that your giggling 90s self was right: it was supposed to be a blunt.

wahnfrieden - 16 hours ago

Washi is my favorite tshirt material