What is dry-cleaning? The answer is washing delicate clothes with organic detergent without using water to prevent them from losing their shape. Dry-cleaning company Hakuyosha was established in 1906 by Kenji Igarashi (1877-1972), a pioneer of dry-cleaning in Japan.
The Igarashi Kenji memorial cleaning museum, located at the company's head office, exhibits about 200 items of laundry equipment and machines that the company has been preserving since the Meiji era (1868-1912), by which visitors can trace the history of dry-cleaning.
Particularly eye-catching is a huge dry-cleaning machine made in Japan and used more than 80 years ago. Its structure resembles that of a current drum-type washer with its laundry tub aslant. However, the inside of the tub was made of wood instead of metal.
"[The wooden tub] caused very little damage to clothes and also prevented production of static electricity, as flammable petroleum-based detergent was used," said Tatsuya Hayakawa, 31, the company's corporate planning department section head.
Dry-cleaning machines made in the United States and a Japan-made machine for washing with water are also showcased. The system of removing dirt by knocking the laundry around in the washing tub seems to have remained unchanged since the beginnings of machine washing.
The museum also exhibits washing tools used until the washing machine appeared in the early 20th century. They include a washing bucket; a wooden corrugated washboard called "zaraita"; and a boiling pot called "nigama" in which white clothes were boiled and washed. The commercial washing bucket, unlike ones seen in period dramas, is large enough for an adult to enter.
In the center of the exhibition room, visitors can observe the evolution of irons: A tool, hinoshi, which is a metal pan used to press out wrinkles on such large clothes as sheets, and a kote, used to smooth wrinkles on small parts of clothes, such as collars, and make creases. Both tools were heated with charcoal but, after electricity usage became widespread, electric kote appeared.
These were basic tools in the laundry business at the time of the company's founding, as well as irons heated on a coal stove's iron plate. Such irons were replaced by electric irons in the early Showa era (1926-1989).
"It is a rare place where modern and contemporary laundry equipment is gathered together. I hope visitors can get the feel not only of our company's history but also that of washing and dry-cleaning laundry in Japan," Hayakawa said.
-- Igarashi Kenji memorial cleaning museum
The museum opened in March 1982. Kenji Igarashi founded Hakuyosha in Tokyo's Nihonbashi district after quitting his job at Mitsukoshi's head office.
Igarashi chose this type of business so that he could attend Christian Sunday services as well as avoid competition with Mitsukoshi's retail business. It is an about 10-minute walk from Shimomaruko Station on the Tokyu Tamagawa Line.
Address: Hakuyosha main building 1F, 2-11-8, Shimomaruko, Ota Ward, Tokyo
Open: 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Closed on Saturdays, Sundays, national holidays and the year-end and New Year holidays.
Admission: Free
Information: (03) 5732-5111
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