If you ever want to see mathematicians get really excited, ask them about Hagoromo Fulltouch Chalk.
âThereâs a scene inÌęLa La Land,âÌęsaid Dave Bayer, professor of mathematics at Columbia Universityâs Barnard College, âwhere Ryan Gosling is under a spotlight playing a toy electric piano one handed during his stint with a âpopularâ group, and the film is brutally clear how this is shredding his soul. Most mathematicians that I know feel this way about whiteboards.â
Writing on a blackboard with the deluxe Japanese chalk made of oyster shells, by contrast, was âlike skiing on fresh powder, or waterskiing at dawn on a calm Adirondack Lakeâ.
Wei Ho, associate professor of mathematics at the University of Michigan, was equally enthusiastic, if less poetic. Hagoromo Fulltouch Chalk, she believed, âwrites much more smoothly than any other chalk that I have used. I donât have to think about pressing too softly â some chalk wonât show up without enough pressure â or pressing too hard or squeakingâŠWith other brands, usually after a lecture, my hands â and clothes! â are covered in chalk.â It was âespecially useful for giving lectures where thereâs more time pressure, so you donât want to waste time and energy thinking about your chalk as you are writingâ.
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There is evenÌęa legendÌęcirculating in the maths community that it is impossible to prove a false theorem while using Hagoromo Fulltouch Chalk.
Not all mathematicians, Professor Bayer admitted, cared about chalk (though those who didnât were often equally obsessed with âa typesetting package called microtype that optically aligns marginsâ). Yet it was undoubtedly a bleak day when in October 2014, after 82 years of production, Takayasu Watanabe, the last president of Hagoromo Stationery, decided toÌęÌęHe cited both his own poor health and âan operating lossâ resulting from a decline in sales from a peak of 90 million sticks a year to half that level. Yet he was confident that production would continue, since he had sold on the machines for making and moulding the chalk to a local stationery manufacturer and a Korean importer calledÌęSejongmall,Ìęand he had plans âto visit South Korea and teach my know-howâ.
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Yet many mathematicians were not convinced by his reassurances and responded instantly to what one described as a âchalk apocalypseâ.
âWhen I heard that the factory had gone out of business,â said Ezra Getzler, professor of mathematics at Northwestern University, âI bought a lifetimeâs supply of the stuff on Amazon.â This amounted to 10 boxes ofÌęwhite chalk, each with 72 sticks, andÌętwo boxes of colouredÌęchalk, costing a total of $280 (ÂŁ200).
Even more dramatic was Professor Bayerâs response. âI read in the middle of the night on social media that the Japanese company had closed. I still had a reasonable stockpile, but I went on Amazon and bought every remaining box for sale in the United States,â he said.
Having acquired his treasures, he âbuilt a padded attachĂ© case for carrying the chalk. This reduced breakage; I now clearly have more than enough chalk to last my career. My students have spoken for my supply when I retire.â
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Dr Ho also recalled how, a few years ago, âcertain professors would be known to have stockpiles of Hagoromo, and they would bring two sticks to seminars to give the speaker â usually a visitor â who would be very appreciative!â
Two further developments have cast new light on this hoarding behaviour. Despite teething problems with machinery, Sejongmall is indeedÌęÌęwhich means that it isÌęeasilyÌęavailable on Amazon. Professor Bayer suspected âone can probably tell the two versions of Hagoromo chalk apart â like new owners buying a pizza joint â but they are close, and either is vastly better than most alternativesâ.
The Covid pandemic has seen several episodes of people rushing out to stockpile oil, tinned vegetables and toilet paper. But the shift to online teaching has called into question the wisdom of those who thought they were showing great foresight in stockpiling mathematical chalk.
âTo be honest,â reported Dr Ho, âI havenât been at a chalkboard since March 2020.â Professor Getzler now âdid all of [his] teaching with a good-quality digital camera, pen and paper. Over Zoom, obviously.â And even Professor Bayer had felt forced to âlearn to write mathematics on an iPad using an Apple Pencilâ.
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âIâm perplexed by the question of how I will teach in the fall,â he reflected. âI will probably distribute digitally drawn notesâ but might still âreview the same content by hand on a blackboardâ.
POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline:ÌęHas mathematiciansâ favourite Japanese chalk lost its silk touch?
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