
The scroll in theĬalligraphy by the Nobel Prize-winning writer Kawabata Yasunari. Photo shows an 8-inch thick tenmasa kaya board. Special bargains for luxury equipment can be found at

We can help you select the equipment most suited to your needs. Inexpensive sets to boards, stones, and bowls of exquisite quality, and This board is not real practical for carrying around.Kiseido offers a large selection of go equipment, from I may try to find a Hyuga Kaya table board, which is why I asked the question in the other thread. I am still looking for a table board to carry with me. I may take some pictures sometime but the Titebond worked really well with the soft wood. The money for a new box cover can go towards a table board. After seeing some of the prices for a new box cover, I was inspired to fix it. The glue was not quick drying but did have a tacky feel rather quickly. I went to small local hardware store and they suggested Titebond II which worked really well. It was in 5 pieces, top piece, and the four sides. I was able to glue back the Paulownia box back together. Now it seems cars just are not as inspiring to have a name. I remember one show where they discussed naming your car. I sometimes listen to Car Talk on NPR which can be highly entertaining. I use to have names for my old cars that were not always reliable. My young daughter has named it Big Red but I may have to name it something else. You will likely end up painting the paulownia since yoy may be using massive amounts of glue which, even in skilled hands, tends toward unsubtle.Ĭongratulations on the board. You might want to spend some time looking at balsa wood model sites to see how larger pieces are glued up or search the sites for restoration and repair tips. I need to make a cloth cover or try to glue the Paulwania cover back together again.ĭepending on how much deflection or impact trauma the soft wood suffered, this could be easy or almost impossible. It had a paulwania cover but it did not make it through shipping. The go stones are supposed to be original with the post by Justin2013 was liked by 12 people: Bonobo, EdLee, Erythen, fireproof, gomeditate, Hong Ny, imabuddha, joellercoaster, lemmata, Ortho, shapenaji, tchan001 It is from 33rd year of Meiji period, which dates to 1900. The older Goban is dated and signed by the artist who made it. If you would like to see the higher resolution images they are is a link to some pictures of other Go boards that I have right now. It does make studying problems easier to do with a nice board. Now, I always make sure my hands are clean and have to keep my children from playing on it. The only problem with owning a nice board is being worried about things happening to it. Now she has nicknamed it Big Red and the older Kaya board Grandpa. My daughter said it smells like Big Red gum. I was pleasantly surprised by the smell on this board. I have an older Japanese Kaya board but it no longer has the smell. The flooring in my house is a little uneven which could cause the board to look sloping. In the pictures the board looks uneven, it is an optical illusion or the camera lens. I took a few pictures of the board and also a couple of the corner and middle of the board to show the density and grain of the board. The stones on the board are size 31 clam. The board measures 4.8 Sun or almost 6 inches. It is much heavier than larger size boards that I've handled before. It weighs about 46 pounds which is due to the masame cut which is a heavier than itame cuts. I recently purchased this board from Japan and received it two days ago.
