So, when Mike first got to Japan he was given a few small wooden cylindrical objects. As it turns out, these were stampers (called hanko), which are used here in lieu of actual signature on official documents (such as legal contracts, banking transactions, postal delivery acknowledgment forms, etc.). The thing is, you need to use this thing. If show up to open a bank account and happen to forget your hanko, forget it! Here is a website describing the use of the hanko in Japan.
In addition to the more classic wooden hankos that must be pressed into a separate ink pad and then pushed down very hard to make an imprint, we also have a more modern self-inking hanko that we keep at home to "sign" for postal deliveries. Jacob is a big fan of signing for packages!
5 comments:
I'm always reading...can you get me a stamper that says biiiig lisa?
It would look like 大レサ (BIG in Kanji and then Katakana Re-Sa)
How about SWMBO???
Don't push it.
:-(
Post a Comment