300-year-old Tokyo comb company sells 30,000-yen wooden hair combs—Are they worth it?

22:16 cherishe 0 Comments

And if you’d rather have a 60,000-yen comb, this Asakusa shop has some of those too.

Asakusa is considered to be Tokyo’s most culturally significant neighborhood, largely due to the presence of the Sensoji Buddhist temple. However, there’re are other historical sites all around Asakusa.

For example, walking past Yonoya, from the store’s classical Japanese architecture you can tell that the company has been making combs for a long time. What you might not guess, though, is just how long: more than 300 years.

Yonoya was founded in 1717, during the reign of Tokugawa Yoshimune, the eighth Tokugawa shogun, and so for their first 150 years of selling combs Japan was still under feudal rule and sealed off from the rest of the world. The company opened its first shop in what’s now Tokyo’s Bunkyo Ward, then moved to their current location not far from Sensoji in the 1910s. So yes, they’ve now got over a century of history even at their “new” location.

While Yonoya also sells kanzashi (ornamental hairpins), their main focus is on boxwood combs, which are called tsugegushi if you’re asking for them in Japanese. As you can tell from the shop’s interior, Yonoya is a quality-over-quantity kind of company, and an immense amount of care and craftsmanship goes into every one of the pieces they offer, starting with the choice of material.

Yonoya uses boxwood because it’s a dense, hard wood. That makes it resistant to bending or warping, and the structural rigidity that boxwood provides is critical. Incidentally, boxwood is also used by Japanese artisans for high-quality abacus beads and pieces for shogi, Japan’s traditional chess-like board game.

Not just any boxwood will do, either. Yonoya sources its materials from Ibusuki, a town in Kagoshima Prefecture, on the opposite side of the country from Tokyo. Before being shipped out of Ibusuki, the boxwood is dried and fumigated over the course of 30 years to strengthen the material. It’s then shipped to the castle town of Kishiwada, Osaka Prefecture, for initial processing by a local company that’s been in the business for generations as well. Then, finally, it arrives at Yonoya, whose craftsmen apply the finishing touches to the combs so that they meet their exacting standards.

In other words, making a Yonoya comb requires a lot of work by a lot of highly specialized artisans, and so their combs don’t come cheap. Even for Yonoya’s non-lacquered combs, you could wind up paying close to 60,000 yen (US$400), depending on how fancy you want to get with the detailing.

Eye-popping as the prices may be, on our Japanese-language reporter Mr. Sato’s visit, he couldn’t help wondering how it would feel to use such a luxurious comb. Recently he’s been growing his hair out, but the longer it gets, the messier it gets, and no amount of effort with his run-of-the-mill plastic comb is doing much to smooth it out.

▼ Sometimes the comb just gets stuck, and he says the heck with it.

So Mr. Sato asked Yonoya’s staff if they could help him pick out a comb, and preferably one that wouldn’t hurt his wallet too much. The first thing to consider, they told him, is the amount of spacing between the combs teeth. Yonoya’s come in three different styles, fine, medium, and coarse, with the general rule being the longer your hair, the coarser spacing you should choose.

Given Mr. Sato’s shoulder-length locks, they recommended a medium-toothed comb. Next, you’ll need to suggest the length of the spine. Here, your options are 3 sun 8 bun, 4 sun 2 bun, 4 sun 5 bun, and an even 5 sun.

Yes, Yonoya is so old-school that they still make their combs to the specifications of traditional pre-metric system Japanese measurement units. Mercifully, they also provide their approximate equivalents of 11.5, 13, 14, and 15 centimeters (4.5, 5.1, 5.5, and 5.9 inches). The longer the spine, the easier it usually is to pass the teeth through your hair, they explained, and since ease of use is what Mr. Sato was looking for, he opted for a 15-centimeter.

Total price, after tax? 29,700 yen (US$198).

▼ But they did throw in a case for free.

This was, by far, the most money Mr. Sato has ever spent on a comb. As soon as he held it in his hand, though, he could tell this was a quality piece, with the wood smooth and light yet obviously sturdy.

But more importantly, it felt amazingly good to use, passing cleanly through his unruly hair and greatly smoothing out unwanted kinks. While it didn’t get his naturally wavy hair completely straight, the results were far more neat and orderly than what he could do with his old plastic comb.

▼ Left: plastic comb
Right: Yonoya comb

Yonoya’s combs are a lot of money, but they also provide a lot of quality. And remember what we said about how the wood is carefully selected to retain its shape? If you take care of a Yonoya comb, it’ll last you for decades, the company says, so if you think of the price in terms of your total comb cost for the next 20 years or so, on an annual basis it suddenly doesn’t seem as expensive.

On the other hand, there’s no denying that nearly 30,000 yen is a lot of money to pay for a comb, so ultimately the question of “Is it worth it?” is probably going to come down to how serious you are about your haircare. In Mr. Sato’s case, at least, he’s feeling good about his purchase, and looking good too.

Shop information
Yonoya / よのや
Address: Tokyo-to, Taito-ku, Asakusa 1-37-10
東京都台東区浅草1-37-10
Open 10:30 a.m.-5 p.m.
Closed every Wednesday, irregularly on Tuesdays and Thursdays
Website

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