Tools for the Japanese Table

Tōjirō Knives: Bringing the Tsubame Brand of Cutting Quality to Global Kitchens

Culture

Tsubame in Niigata Prefecture is a small city of 80,000 people, but it produces some of Japan’s leading metalwork products. Today Tsubame has teamed up with the neighboring city of Sanjō to produce the Tsubame Sanjō brand of products, taking advantage of the area’s advanced techniques and skill. We visited knife maker Tōjirō and the Tsubame Industrial Materials Museum to learn how the local metalworking industry has developed.

An Industry Developed for Survival

How has Tsubame’s metalworking industry managed such striking development, fusing traditional craftsmanship and the most recent machine technology? Saitō Yūsuke, the chief curator of the Tsubame Industrial Materials Museum, says that first, “you have to understand the geography of the region.”

Clockwise from upper left: The Tsubame Industrial Materials Museum; chief curator Saitō Yūsuke discusses the region’s history of metalworking; an exhibition room in the museum’s new building.

The industry has its roots in the region’s geography, Saitō explains. “The Shinano River that flows through the Niigata Plain is Japan’s longest river. Its course takes it down an incline until just before it reaches Tsubame, where it suddenly levels out. Tsubame is surrounded by the Shinano River and its tributaries, and because of this it was hit by floods nearly every year until the Ōkōzu diversion channel was built in 1922. That made rice farming difficult, and the hard-pressed farmers had little choice but to take up metalworking as a side business to survive. If you understand this, it’s much easier to understand Tsubame.”

People in Tsubame began making Japanese nails in the first half of the seventeenth century. At the turn of the eighteenth century, they began making rasps and files, and later in that century they began making metal smoking pipes and Tsuiki copperware. As the Japanese nail industry declined with the start of imports of Western-style nails in the Meiji era (1868–1912), those craftsmen were absorbed in other industries. With the outbreak of World War I, an inquiry was received from Russia about making silverware. This was because Germany, which had produced most of their tableware used in Russia until then, was now an enemy state. The basic forms for spoons and other utensils were first made by Tsuiki copperware craftsmen. Smoking pipe craftsmen then applied their chasing techniques, taking charge of the ornamental parts and fabricating dies for mass production. The manufacture of Western-style tableware, begun in this way, thrived and led to the expansion of the region’s stainless-steel processing technology.

“The polishing techniques used in smoking pipes were applied to spoons, and later iPods—and most recently to the Nissan GT-R muffler,” says Saitō. “When an industry declines as a result of changing times, often the entire region suffers. But while Tsubame has carried on its traditional technologies, it has not been overly insistent on tradition. Rather, it has adapted skillfully to the challenges of new industries. I think it is because our metalworking industry began as a means of survival.”

Smoking pipes on exhibit in the Tsubame Industrial Materials Museum. The region’s artisans mastered techniques from metal-forming to chasing and polishing in order to create works like these.

New Value Through Technological Integration

Companies in Tsubame are known for actively cooperating and coordinating with other firms and factories, rather than limiting themselves to their own production techniques and lines of business. In recent years they have also partnered with producers in the neighboring city of Sanjō, delivering high-quality metalwork to both domestic and overseas markets under the “Tsubame-Sanjō brand.”

Saitō points to the cooperation between Tsuiki copperware artisans and smoking pipe craftsmen in making spoons as one example of the local people coming together fluidly to achieve new goals. “People would freely ask whether another shop could produce a part with its particular techniques, bringing in other workers from nearby as needed. This steadily expanded the range of work that Tsubame could do. I call this kind of industrial activity ‘technology curation,’ and I think it may be a key to Japanese small companies’ survival in the world.”

Clockwise from upper left: The Tsubame Industrial Materials Museum displays a selection of Japanese nails, a reproduction of a Tsuiki copperware workshop, and a special exhibition on the history of the local metalworking industry.

Opening the Factory to Preserve Product Value

In recent years, Tōjirō has found its business threatened by inexpensive knives from Asian countries. Japanese products, with their high labor costs, face a disadvantage in terms of price competitiveness. To create stronger ties with its customers, Tōjirō launched regular factory tours in July 2017.

Clockwise from top: A factory worker carefully checks a blade; a female artisan carefully polishes a weld; blade-sharpening work is repeated many times.

Gyokusendō and the globally recognized outdoor brand Snow Peak, produced in Sanjō, have raised their product value by opening their workshops to the public,” says Tōjirō gallery chief Ogawa Masato. “Recently, knives from Asian countries has improved in appearance. The makers of those knives can’t easily copy our highest technology, but it’s difficult for customers to discern that. We therefore opened our plant so that people could see our advanced techniques and careful workmanship for themselves and pass the word along to others.”

This, says Ogawa, is the way for Tōjirō—and Tsubame as a whole—to keep making knives with insistence on the highest cutting quality.

Artisans at work seen from visitors’ walkway (right side).

(Originally written in Japanese by Nippon.com editorial staff and published on July 3, 2017. All photographs by Kodera Kei.)

Information

Tōjirō Knife Gallery

Location:  9-5 Yoshida Higashi Sakae-chō, Tsubame, Niigata
Hours:  10:00 to 18:00, Monday–Saturday (check website for details)
Tel.:  0256-93-4195
Web:  http://tojiro.net/

Tsubame Industrial Materials Museum

Location:  4330-1 Ōmagari, Tsubame, Niigata
Hours: 9:00 to 16:30 (last entry at 16:00); closed Mondays (if Monday is a holiday, closed the following day), the day following holidays, and year-end/new year
Admission:  Adults ¥300, children ¥100; group discounts available
Web:  http://www.city.tsubame.niigata.jp/shiryou/

Related Tags

craftsmanship metalworking Niigata

Other articles in this report