Posted by ethanpil 1 day ago
It pretty obviously wasn't intended to be designed in the Chindogu style, as that was the standard method of telling time in Japan before the modern time system was adopted, but it sure feels like it when looking at it now.
Well, that’s something quite old and still new to me. Thank you for sharing.
One of my personal chindogu ideas (someday) is to wire them all up so I can control them from a phone app, then strap them to different "meridian points" on a customer to deliver an authentic beeper massage experience.
I'm Canadian (Alberta specifically), and I never use umbrellas, and I hardly ever see anyone else using them either. I've also travelled to lots of the other Canadian provinces and US states, and I don't remember ever seeing people using umbrellas there either. But this could be very local, so there might be regions in NA where umbrella usage is more common.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chind%C5%8Dgu
While they are humorous, it's a serious artistic endeavor at its core, so it's not exactly "laugh-out-loud" funny. I feel like there are much crazier inventions in Japan—I wish I could think of some specific examples to share right now, but nothing is coming to mind at the moment.
One "interesting" invention (that might have seemed a bit silly at first) is fan-cooled workwear. With Japan’s summer temperatures now constantly hitting 35°C (95°F), what started as a quirky idea has become an absolute necessity.
There’s something inherently funny about the models in the link posing so seriously while wearing clothes that are completely puffed up with air.
0 - https://www.acehardware.com/departments/home-and-decor/kitch...