がっちりマンデー!! 2024年8月18日 儲かるプロ文房具

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がっちりマンデー!! 2024年8月18日 儲かるプロ文房具
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00:00Today's Gacchiri Monday is all about local professional stationery!
00:08At school and at home, a lot of stationery is used.
00:15But in fact, there is a stationery made for professionals.
00:23It's called professional stationery.
00:29Of course, when professionals use it for their work, it has to be of a higher quality.
00:36But if professionals like it, everyone can use it for their work.
00:43If it's amazing, you can sell it even if it's expensive.
00:47The number is more than 50,000.
00:49It's 32 million.
00:5132 million?
00:53It makes a lot of money!
00:56For some reason, there was a special pen used in the monorail.
01:02I can write with it.
01:05You can write in water? What does that mean?
01:09For some reason, there is a magic cutter used by wallpaper craftsmen.
01:14I only use this.
01:16You can't see the seams of the wallpaper.
01:19What a surprising sharpness!
01:22Professional stationery that makes money.
01:24Even if you're not a professional, you'll want it.
01:2730 minutes of amazing items.
01:33Good morning.
01:34Today is professional stationery.
01:37Stationery that professionals use.
01:39Stationery is amazing now.
01:42Stationery is amazing, but professionals use it.
01:45It's absolutely amazing.
01:47I'm sure you'll want it.
01:49I can't help wanting that cutter.
01:52I just looked at it.
01:56Good morning.
01:57Tsuchiya-kun.
01:58Nice to meet you.
01:59Nice to meet you.
02:01Nice to meet you.
02:02Nice to meet you.
02:15It has a chain of glasses.
02:17The finish is amazing.
02:19The end of the world of stationery.
02:21The end of the world of stationery.
02:23The end of the world of stationery.
02:25The end of the world of stationery.
02:27I see.
02:28The end of the world of stationery.
02:30Let me introduce today's guest.
02:33Tsuchiya Nobuyuki, a professional stationery maker.
02:35Yamazaki Seitaro, a creative director.
02:37Good morning.
02:40Why is Tsuchiya-kun here?
02:42He's involved in stationery business.
02:45Eraser!
02:46Eraser soccer.
02:48He's the president of the World Eraser Soccer Association.
02:52How many members do you have?
02:54I have one member for the past five years.
02:59I'm learning how to draw.
03:01I started learning at school.
03:04It's starting to look like that.
03:07What kind of things does Yamazaki-san design?
03:11I sometimes make ads, buildings, and spaces.
03:15I don't think there's anything I can't make.
03:17That's amazing.
03:19What's in your chest?
03:21I brought stationery.
03:23My stationery.
03:25I made it myself.
03:29It's small, isn't it?
03:31I made it.
03:32If you make it thin here, it will bend.
03:34You made it thin.
03:36It's a bamboo, so it's a natural object.
03:38It's getting better and better.
03:40It's changing every year.
03:42Today, professional stationery is coming out.
03:45Let's take a look.
03:47Professional stationery that makes money.
03:49First of all, that stationery has evolved surprisingly.
03:53First of all, this company in Osaka came to us for professional stationery that makes money.
03:59I'm Alpha. Nice to meet you.
04:02You make it yourself?
04:03Yes, we are a manufacturer that sells cutlery.
04:08I've seen it before.
04:10Alpha, a cutter knife known for its yellow and black design.
04:15He invented a type of cutter that cuts the blade for the first time in the world.
04:20That's why it's called Alpha.
04:21The domestic share of the cutter is over 50%.
04:25In 2023, it will be about 8.2 billion yen.
04:2950% is amazing.
04:31Thank you very much.
04:33Actually, Alpha also makes a lot of professional cutters.
04:39This is called Kaikon Pro, which makes it easy to open the cardboard box.
04:45The shape is a little strange.
04:49The tip of the knife is hooked to the tape that closes the box.
04:54Then, it opens.
04:57This is done with a pair of scissors.
04:59It is very popular in the stationery industry, where cardboard boxes are opened every day.
05:03This is a series V-shape.
05:05Last year, it sold 230,000 copies per year.
05:10In addition, there is a professional stationery that is popular in the apparel industry.
05:14This is a rotary cutter.
05:16A rotary cutter.
05:18If it's a normal cutter knife when you cut cloth, it's like this.
05:22You can't cut it clean at all.
05:26But if it's a rotary cutter, you can push it with a round blade.
05:31You can cut it cleanly even if it's a curve.
05:36It's amazing.
05:38I use it.
05:39Do you use it?
05:40Do you use it?
05:41Yes, I use it.
05:43You can use it as a normal cutter knife.
05:45That's right.
05:46According to Mr. Hatanaka, there are many professional cutters.
05:53Here it is.
05:55This is a special long cutter knife.
05:58At first glance, it looks like a normal cutter knife.
06:02This is a very popular cutter knife in a certain industry.
06:07Is it very popular?
06:08It's very popular.
06:09The number of shipments per year of this series of cutters is about 160,000.
06:16The number of shipments per year of this series of cutters is 32 million.
06:24That's a lot.
06:25That's right.
06:26It's a lot.
06:28It looks like it's very popular.
06:31What kind of professional is this cutter knife used for?
06:36Do you use it?
06:37This is an old cutter knife.
06:38This is an old cutter knife.
06:40What do you use it for?
06:42I use it to cut wallpaper.
06:45I always use this.
06:48It's interesting because it's solid.
06:50Thank you very much.
06:52This is a special long cutter knife.
06:54This is a very popular product for interior professionals, including Mr. Zaichi.
06:59The main use of this is to cut wallpaper.
07:04When you cut the wallpaper and put it together, you can make a boundary.
07:10I can't help it.
07:14However, when you put the wallpaper cut with this special long cutter knife on it,
07:20It's amazing.
07:25The gap is gone.
07:28Is this because of Mr. Zaichi or Mr. Orfa?
07:34I don't know at all.
07:35Where is it?
07:38I don't know where it is.
07:40Is the sharpness of the cutter important to make it look beautiful?
07:44I think it's important.
07:46It's very important.
07:48How did you make such a sharpness?
07:51Let's ask Mr. Watanabe, who is in charge of development, about the difference between a normal cutter knife and this.
07:57The sharpening angle is very sharp, so the sharpness is very important.
08:01The blade is completely different.
08:02The thickness of the blade is the same.
08:04The width of the blade is wide.
08:06It's called the width of the blade.
08:08If it's wide, it's obviously sharp.
08:13If you look at it from the front, you can see that the special long cutter knife has a sharper angle.
08:20If you cut the wallpaper with these two blades,
08:25The normal cutter knife has a slightly rounded corner.
08:30The special long cutter knife has a square corner.
08:35As a result, when the wallpaper is pasted together, it overlaps and becomes difficult to see.
08:42Mr. Watanabe says that the sharpness of this cutter knife also affects the sound.
08:46You can cut it like this.
08:52The sound is different, isn't it?
08:55Is it dull?
09:00Do you understand?
09:02It's a little dull.
09:05It's light, isn't it?
09:06I think it's light.
09:07I thought so, but it's light.
09:10It's like this when you compare it after a while.
09:15The normal cutter knife has a slightly straight cut at the entrance.
09:23As you can see, the special long cutter knife is a little longer than the normal cutter knife.
09:31And it makes sense.
09:33There are so many blades.
09:35There are quite a few.
09:36Once you insert the cutter and release it, you can cut it.
09:40The wallpaper craftsman always wants to cut with a good sharpness, so there are a lot of times when he cuts the blade of the cutter.
09:50Therefore, it is easier for the craftsman to buy a blade with a large number of blades that can be used for one cut.
09:58I see.
09:59It's 32 million.
10:0132 million?
10:02That's right.
10:03That's going to sell.
10:04It's going to sell.
10:05That's amazing.
10:06Orfa makes various professional-oriented cutters.
10:11You know the cutter maker called Orfa, don't you?
10:15I have a cutter that cuts cardboard.
10:18Really?
10:19Yes.
10:20Normally, we have to be able to cut the blade, don't we?
10:25How much do you recommend Orfa to do?
10:28I think the cutter is often shared at work.
10:32If that's the case, there's a rule that you should cut it once when you use it.
10:37I have an idea.
10:39When you close the lid, make sure the blade doesn't come out.
10:45I have an idea.
10:46Yes.
10:47When you close the lid, make sure the blade doesn't come out.
10:54If it doesn't come out, you can only start with a break.
11:03How is it?
11:04I think it's great.
11:05I think it's a challenge for ordinary people to cut their own blades.
11:13I bought it because the sharpness didn't change.
11:15Oh, that's great.
11:17There's still room for improvement.
11:19It's going to be popular.
11:21Now, the next professional stationery is a great tool that can be used for anything.
11:27The next professional stationery company is this company in Osaka.
11:32Oh, there's a big sakura.
11:36Our company produces kurpi.
11:40I'm Okada from Sakura Kurepasu.
11:43Speaking of Sakura Kurepasu,
11:45it's a well-known stationery company.
11:48Kurpi is a great tool.
11:50Kurpi pens are also beautiful.
11:52Yusei pen, my name, and other popular products.
11:56The price is 4.63 billion yen.
12:01It's often used at home,
12:04but they also make great stationery for professionals.
12:08What is it?
12:09Here it is.
12:11It's called a solid marker.
12:13A solid marker?
12:15I'll try writing on it.
12:19But it's a bit like a crayon.
12:23That's right. It's a product that's used a lot in a certain industry.
12:26In a certain industry?
12:28The solid marker itself doesn't look like a special pen.
12:33In the past 10 years, sales have increased by about 1.5 times.
12:37In the past 10 years?
12:39What kind of professionals use it?
12:42I heard there's stationery here.
12:45Yes, there is.
12:47Oh?
12:48This is the Tokyo Monorail vehicle base.
12:52They repair the tires, check them, and repair the broken parts of the vehicle.
12:59Oh?
13:00Huh?
13:01Is that it?
13:04Excuse me.
13:05Excuse me.
13:06It's so pretty.
13:07Is this Sakura Clepas?
13:10Yes, that's right.
13:12Oh, there it is.
13:14A solid marker.
13:16It's written in various colors in pink.
13:19It's so pretty.
13:20What were you doing just now?
13:22It's hard to see the serial number of the tire.
13:27So I'm rewriting it big.
13:30Watanabe-san, who is in charge of maintenance, says...
13:32To manage each tire, it's best to write the information directly on the tire.
13:40From the serial number to the position to attach the tires and wheels...
13:44It's certainly easy to understand.
13:47But why is it a solid marker?
13:50You can write on rubber tires, of course.
13:53But you can also write on metal tires.
13:57It's very convenient.
13:59Because of the characteristics of the monorail...
14:01There are rubber tires and metal parts.
14:06It's very convenient to write on one tire.
14:09That's right.
14:10Solid markers can be written in any color, regardless of the material.
14:16What about oil-based pens?
14:18For oil-based pens, there is a solvent in the ink.
14:23Solvent?
14:24It's very effective on rubber tires.
14:26You can melt it?
14:28I always use this.
14:30What's more, solid markers can be written in any situation.
14:35Monorails run on gravel.
14:38But it doesn't disappear.
14:39Normal ink pens can't be written in the rain.
14:44But solid markers can be written on gravel.
14:47You can write on water, even if it's wet or hot.
14:52What's more...
14:53If you touch the car on the way back, you can't touch it because it's too hot.
14:59But solid markers don't disappear.
15:02It's 100 degrees.
15:03The strength of solid markers is that they can be written in any situation.
15:11This is the ultimate strength.
15:14Solid markers can be written even in water.
15:17Even in water?
15:18Yes.
15:20According to Mr. Kitaguchi, he can write even in water.
15:24Is that true?
15:26We have prepared crayons and oil-based markers for the experiment.
15:32Let's start with the crayons.
15:34I'm going to draw a picture of Mr. Koji Kato.
15:37Okay.
15:42I'm going to draw a picture of Mr. Koji Kato.
15:44It will be a blurry picture.
15:48What about the oil-based markers?
15:54It's going to break.
15:55I think it's going to be bad.
15:59He can't draw either.
16:01I think so, too.
16:04What is the strength of solid markers?
16:08It's like this.
16:09Is that true?
16:10It's amazing.
16:14Look at this.
16:15It's amazing.
16:16It's different from what I saw.
16:18It's amazing.
16:20Mr. Koji Kato is good at drawing.
16:25He can draw even in water.
16:30What does that mean, Mr. Kitaguchi?
16:33This is where the paint was hardened.
16:37The paint is a little sticky.
16:39It's like painting.
16:42That's the image.
16:45Liquid ink in conventional pens melts in water and does not stick to the object.
16:50As a result, it can't be drawn.
16:54On the other hand, crayons are made of oil, wax, and a large amount of pigment.
17:00There are few things that stick to water.
17:02I can't draw this, either.
17:05However, the solid marker ink is a special material that is between solid and liquid.
17:13So, a thick object sticks to the object.
17:17As a result, it can be drawn well.
17:22I can see Mr. Kato's teeth.
17:26Sakura crayons are made of oil, wax, and a large amount of pigment.
17:32It's amazing.
17:33I didn't know that.
17:35It's like a scene.
17:38That's right.
17:43It's like lipstick.
17:46It's like lipstick.
17:48Is that right?
17:49That's right.
17:50In principle, it's similar to lipstick.
17:54Sometimes, people ask for autographs at random places.
17:59That's right.
18:00For example, people ask for autographs on the wall or on the spatula of a teppanyaki restaurant.
18:05Sometimes, people don't ask for autographs.
18:06That's right.
18:07It's good when people don't ask for autographs.
18:09Is it okay to work in a cold place?
18:12In fact, solid markers for cold places are also available.
18:19There are related materials.
18:22I didn't have enough ideas.
18:26Next, we visited a company in Sanjo City, Niigata Prefecture.
18:36Nice to meet you.
18:37Nice to meet you.
18:38This is Mr. Igarashi, the president of the company.
18:40What kind of stationery do you make here?
18:43We make stationery that is more than 60 years old.
18:48We make and sell measuring tools.
18:55I'm sorry.
18:56I'm nervous.
18:58That's right.
18:59In the second half of the century, more than 500 kinds of measuring tools were sold.
19:05How much did they sell?
19:08It's worth several billion yen.
19:11That's amazing.
19:12You're selling it.
19:13That's right.
19:14It's worth several billion yen.
19:17In the second half of the century, there were various measuring tools for professionals.
19:23From the Nogiz, which measures the size of the object by sandwiching it,
19:28to the Suijun-ki, which measures the level of the surface.
19:33Among them, the professional stationery of the second half of the century is the most popular.
19:39This is a spiral measure.
19:41A spiral measure?
19:42This is how it's used.
19:45It's very simple.
19:46You can stretch it.
19:49We've sold more than 50,000 of them in the past four years.
19:53More than 50,000?
19:54Yes.
19:55We've also won the Good Design Award.
19:59This spiral measure looks colorful and cute,
20:04but it also looks like a regular measure.
20:08That's right.
20:09That's why it's for professionals.
20:13Let's go to the training facility of Ote-Zenekon Taisei Construction,
20:16where there are professionals who can master it.
20:22President Igarashi came all the way from Niigata to Chiba.
20:29Is that it?
20:30That's right.
20:32I'm sorry.
20:35Is that Niigata Station's spiral measure?
20:37Yes, it is.
20:39What are you doing here?
20:41I'm taking a background photo.
20:44A background photo?
20:45Yes.
20:46A background photo is a photo taken before the concrete is filled in
20:52to show how much steel there is in the building.
20:55Construction companies must do this,
20:59but it's quite difficult.
21:02Do you do this at construction sites?
21:04Because there are people who pull it out.
21:06I think there are about 500 pieces in total.
21:11That's a lot of steel.
21:12I have to take a lot of pictures,
21:14so it's easy to carry around if I have a compact measure like this.
21:19Excuse me.
21:21Is this kind of light measure helpful?
21:23That's right.
21:24I usually carry a lot of things.
21:26I carry about three.
21:30That's great.
21:31Thank you very much.
21:34The spiral measure was made by Niigata Station
21:38at the request of Mr. Tanaka, the founder of Taisei Construction.
21:45This is what it looked like 10 years ago.
21:49I hold the drawing and the camera in my hand.
21:53That's what it looks like.
21:55In the past, he carried a large ruler, a camera, and a blackboard
22:00at any site.
22:03I carry all of this and go up to the floor above.
22:07It's hard work.
22:10Now, if you have a tablet and a spiral measure, it's easy.
22:14The weight is about 1 in 30 compared to this ruler.
22:19And it's compact.
22:21However, if you stretch it, it doesn't wobble.
22:25There's a magnet on both ends, so you can fix it with this.
22:29It's also attached to the vertical part.
22:33Do you attach it to the wall?
22:34Yes, that's right.
22:36It's easy.
22:38However, this spiral measure,
22:40Mr. Shinbo, who is in charge of development, said that it was very difficult to complete.
22:47It was hard work.
22:49The failure was not a big deal.
22:53It wasn't a big deal.
22:55The hope of a scan pro is light and compact.
23:00Mr. Shinbo tried to remove the case and spring, which are the cause of the weight,
23:05from the spiral measure.
23:07However, if he does so, it will not be able to roll automatically and will not be compact.
23:13Therefore, Mr. Shinbo looked at something and shined.
23:16I see.
23:20Mr. Shinbo shined when he tried to remove the heavy case and spring from the measure.
23:27When I run, I put it on my arm like this.
23:31I thought it was a good idea.
23:35Now, let's make this one-touch band longer.
23:40If you make this one-touch band longer, you can make a measure that rolls automatically.
23:45This is the solution.
23:46I see.
23:47However, there is another problem.
23:51Su-chan, it's better to have a magnet on the back, right?
23:54That's right.
23:55That's why it started.
23:57It took about two and a half years to complete the shape of the magnet.
24:05I'm glad it's done.
24:07I'm relieved that it's done.
24:10Until now, we have sold 50,000 of them at construction sites.
24:15This year, we will prepare the production system and sell the first batch.
24:19This is still going to grow.
24:22In the second half of the century, we will make a measure for professionals.
24:28That's great.
24:30Isn't it really easy to do this?
24:33What kind of people do this?
24:36They solve the problem with a pinpoint.
24:38So, it's really easy.
24:41President Igarashi is here today.
24:43Another advantage is that the shape of the memory is different.
24:48The memory goes up the stairs.
24:52Recently, I've been getting old.
24:56I can't see anymore.
24:59It's so easy to see.
25:01This is a great idea.
25:03We've seen a lot of things.
25:05Lastly, please tell us your favorite professional grammar.
25:09That's after the commercial.
25:14Please tell us your favorite professional grammar.
25:18Here it is.
25:20It's called a holder.
25:23There is a very thick part inside.
25:25It contains only the core of the pencil.
25:28Is there such a thing?
25:30You can use it for design or design.
25:32You can use it in the way you want to use it.
25:35It's like a pencil sharpener.
25:37When you write, it's normal.
25:39It's like a thick pencil.
25:42It looks like Montblanc.
25:44It's Montblanc.
25:45Is this Montblanc?
25:48In the end, you have to sharpen the pencil every time.
25:52You can decide the length yourself.
25:55It's good to have your own sense.
25:57If you use the back of the eraser, you'll get angry.
26:01Ice cream that makes a lot of money.
26:03Sakure, which sells 50 million units a year in Tochigi, has a different lemon.
26:07You're using a young lemon.
26:09It's too young.
26:10Matcha gelato made by a teahouse in Shizuoka.
26:12You can choose the thickness.
26:14I want to eat No. 7.
26:16Ice cream.
26:18Ice cream.
26:22Ice cream.
26:24Ice cream.
26:26If you want to watch this program again, please go to TVer or NewNext.

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