#how its made

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Above,the He Family finishes and sorts through a batch of green tea.

Did you know? It takes over 6 hours of skilled processing to create just 10 lbs of the He Family’s Laoshan Green.

#now you know    #verdant tea    #laoshan tea    #he family    #laoshan    #green tea    #how its made    #how to    #tea farm    #tea farmer    #farm to cup    

“If you don’t work for it, it won’t grow.” - Mr. He, Laoshan, Shandong

In his own words, Mr. He discusses the challenges of growing his family’s teas in Laoshan.

From irrigation and organic fertilizers to managing his fields and protecting his plants from the weather, you can listen and learn about the labor and ingenuity that goes into growing and picking your favorite Laoshan teas, from the expert himself.

Don’t forget - as part of our Chinese New Year celebrations, you can save TWICE on the He Family’s Laoshan teas through 02.08.16: just use the coupon code TEAMONKEY2 to save an extra 16% on top off our current 10% pre-order sales.

#verdant tea    #laoshan    #laoshan tea    #laoshan green    #laoshan black    #he family    #tea farm    #tea farmer    #agriculture    #organic    #how its made    #chinese new year    #tea sale    #tea coupon    #in his own words    
Step 2: Sarcasm by Krittikae (on tee here)

Step 2: Sarcasm by Krittikae (on tee here)


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Chemewstry by Yazmoq (on tee here)

Chemewstry by Yazmoq (on tee here)


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If you were a fan of the “Como se faz?” segments in Castelo Rá-Tim-Bum you will probably really like the show How It’s Made.

It’s more or less the same premise but with less singing because Canadians are cowards.

For anyone who wants to see what the Brazilian version is like:

how it’s made

#how its made    #unmute    

sirfrogsworth:

I love watching How It’s Made. Though I wish they would go one level deeper. They show all of these manufacturing processes with gigantic proprietary custom engineered machines that spit out 4 billion Cheetos at once. I want to see how those are made. I want to see a show called How They Make the Things That Make Things.

That is truly some of the most creative engineering I’ve ever seen. Like, my brother designs airplane wings for fighter jets. Which is cool… but wings haven’t changed much in decades. He’s kind of a… re-engineer. (Sorry, bro.)

Whereas a custom built machine that sharpens dozens of pencils at once must have had some interesting trial and error problem-solving. How did they settle on this design and what other designs did they try?

Or how did they make this ice cream sandwich masturbation mechanism. 

I want to see the messy test footage of ice cream going everywhere on the beta version. 

Who engineers these things?
How are they built?
How much do they cost? 

I might have to go on a YouTube hunt. 

Having worked in a factory, a lot of machines are *extremely* specific. Like, there is no generic Pencil Making Machine company or Shingle Stamper you can order.  

Sometimes it’s a hybrid: Electric guitar manufacturing might use CNC routing to do major first-step carving/shaping of bodies and necks from blanks, but then there’s a lot of hand operations with traditional woodworking tools: bandsaws, table saws, planers, rasps / chisels, drill presses, belt sanders, table routers, glue and clamps for laminates, etc.

Some things look custom but in fact are made by many different companies, like industrial rug drying centrifuges for the carpet cleaning business.

In the case of things for fine manufacturing and food, almost everything is made custom.

Often, the company themselves will have a full machine shop where they keep big billets of stainless steel and aluminum, TIG welding setups, and industrial lathes and punches to make replacement parts from scratch. 

And there is lore about the machines and how they work and the factory employees need to be trained on them by people who in turn were trained by someone else, sometimes going back over a hundred years for factories that have been continuously running since the 1800s.

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