• Sentei Garden Scissors

Sentei Garden Scissors

Niwaki

Regular price € 35,29
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Description

Niwaki's Sentei Garden Scissors are perfect for ikebana, cutting flowers, dead-heading and light pruning, as well as for pottering about — looking for something to snip. Their sharp, precise blades make for satisfying, clean cuts on softer green stems, while being beefy enough to cut through woodier stems...

Niwaki's Sentei Garden Scissors are perfect for ikebana, cutting flowers, dead-heading and light pruning, as well as for pottering about — looking for something to snip. Their sharp, precise blades make for satisfying, clean cuts on softer green stems, while being beefy enough to cut through woodier stems up to around pencil thickness.

Use the tips for delicate work and make bigger cuts further down the blades.

The traditional round handles are easy to grab, comfy to hold, and allow for the perfect sensitivity of delicate and accurate cuts, combined with great grip for more substantial cutting. They’re fairly small, perfect for smaller hands and jobs around the garden and the home.

Details

Measures 17,2 x 10,2 x 1,7 mm
Features 50 mm blades, max cut Ø5 mm
Made from KA70 Carbon Steel
Made in Japan

Niwaki x Misc Store Amsterdam

Niwaki brings the very best in Japanese design and craftsmanship, inspiring gardeners and craftsmen to do the stuff they love, even better. They source and manufacture an extraordinary range of fine garden and woodworking tools, kitchen knives and outdoor gear.

Niwaki means garden tree. Not very exciting, but it implies far more than that. Japanese gardens are landscapes, microcosms of nature, and the trees are all shaped to fit into those landscapes — there’s an awful lot of artistry and cultural baggage in there too. Jake’s written a book on it all, if you’re interested. So, the name. Hard to pronounce (ni-whacky) and tricky to remember, but we like it because of its implications.

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About Niwaki

Niwaki brings the very best in Japanese design and craftsmanship, inspiring gardeners and craftsmen to do the stuff they love, even better. They source and manufacture an extraordinary range of fine garden and woodworking tools, kitchen knives and outdoor gear.

Niwaki means garden tree. Not very exciting, but it implies far more than that. Japanese gardens are landscapes, microcosms of nature, and the trees are all shaped to fit into those landscapes — there’s an awful lot of artistry and cultural baggage in there too. Jake’s written a book on it all, if you’re interested. So, the name. Hard to pronounce (ni-whacky) and tricky to remember, but we like it because of its implications.

Almost everything in Niwaki's range is stuff they use themselves. Jake’s — founder of Niwaki — first day of pine pruning in Osaka, he was given a pair of garden scissors, still sharp as anything, more than a decade later. Brother-in-law Haruyasu bought Jake his first pair of Japanese shears, and he’s rarely used anything else since. His wife Keiko uses her garden scissors in the house, for cutting flowers (she never cleans them, they go rusty, and Jake has to revive them, but they’re still working.) Grandpa reaches for his trusty pruning saw when he wanders off to reap havoc in the woodland… It’s all good stuff, and their proud of it.