>>15940939Oh, you're welcome, it's pretty good indeed, have fun.
>>15940940>metal chopsticks are actually the traditional norm in koreaAh, alright then, good to know. I don't know why I thought that silverware wasn't even a thing that existed back in those days. Also, damn, I looked at that picture, and I thought for just a second that they used them while they were in that rusty state, and was really baffled before realizing.
Anyway, that spoon is a bit interesting, you can see how the design is just slightly different compared to the spoons of today. It's more of a small and crooked plate on a stick, rather than a spoon as you know it. It's obviously inferior, but, I do have to say, the way that the head is crooked upwards might actually be just a tad little more comfortable to use, if you imagine it while eating rice, for example? Given that it was more like a proper spoon in every other way, of course. Maybe I'm stretching it, could be not any different than a normal spoon at all, but, yeah, there's that someone out there might like it over what we have now, still. I just find it cool how the simplest things that we use like spoons still had an evolution throughout the years, you know? It makes you wonder of all the little things that could've potentially been better that just got scrapped away, also. Probably just rambling, but, yeah. Maybe spoons like that are still around even, I just wouldn't know.
>all the metal chopsticks i've usedI see, I mean, after using them since the 13th century, you would imagine that they'd get pretty advanced with their metal chopstick technology.
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