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ABOUT2

About Us

Nice to meet you.

Thank you very much for taking a look.

Where there is light in the darkness, people naturally gather.

Lovers fall in love with the flickering flames reflected in each other's eyes.

If families occasionally turn off the lights, gaze at the flame of the lamp, and talk together,

they will surely become a wonderful family.

 

Third Generation: Akira Bessho

Our History

 

FLAME SENSE is the lamp brand of WINGED WHEEL Co., founded in 1924. It traces its origins to the first-generation founder, Tomekichi Bessho, who spent ten years perfecting Japan's first “storm-proof lamp”—the hurricane lamp.

 

WINGED WHEEL has now become the only remaining lamp manufacturer in Japan, but it continues manufacturing under the unchanged philosophy passed down since the first generation: ‘to create beautiful lamps that cast beautiful light.Beyond hurricane lamps for outdoor use, they design and manufacture a diverse range of oil lamps, including indoor lamps that create warm spaces. The #500 Hurricane Lamp, still sold today, incorporates minor improvements to suit the times while preserving as much of the original founding techniques as possible. 

The manufacturing process for the Hurricane Lamp involves approximately 200 steps, with assembly still performed by hand by skilled artisans.

 

The four-prong burner is a product that should be mentioned alongside the Hurricane Lamp. Its technology was inherited from another burner manufacturer that ceased operations in 1955 and has been preserved to this day. Pursuing the user experience for our customers, this burner, like our other products, emits a gentle, soft light.

 

The burner for indoor oil lamps was redesigned, inspired by the burner of the Western-style oil lamp. It creates a romantic atmosphere with its beautiful, gentle, and warm light.

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About the Fifth Generation

 

I am Japan's sole lamp artisan.

I was born into a family of lampmakers that began in 1924.

When I was in elementary school, the company dissolved once,

yet my mother (the fourth generation) restarted lampmaking with the strong conviction, “I absolutely must continue making lamps.”

 

When I was in college, the skilled assembly craftsman who had been the backbone of the company passed away suddenly. My mother's words, “Maybe we can't make lamps anymore,” moved me. “Then I'll make them,” I declared. Overruling my mother's objections, I dropped out of university and joined the family business.

But far greater obstacles than I imagined lay ahead. To my shock, no lamp-making manuals or blueprints remained. The old craftsmen had passed everything down verbally. We relied solely on my mother's memory and the knowledge of the one remaining factory manager.

Yet that manager was an old-school type who believed “women shouldn't enter the factory” and that "you don't learn the job by being taught. Steal it by watching." Yet, at my mother's request, he accepted me. With a notebook in hand, I spent entire days following his back, learning the work while pondering why he did things a certain way.

When illness eventually forced him to leave the workshop, he reportedly told my mother, “She's the one who could do it. She'll definitely manage.” Even now, ten years later, those words still sustain me.

 

Assembling our hurricane lamps involves numerous manual tasks alongside several operations requiring specialized machinery.

These machines are our own original, vintage equipment, and their blueprints no longer exist.

Even repair shops can't fix them, and sometimes I just stand helplessly before the machines.

Yet, by borrowing the wisdom of craftsmen in Yao City, a town known for manufacturing, we manage to repair them.

Thus, we continue production, preserving history by maintaining the manufacturing methods as much as possible.

 

Even with simple structures, the old machines have a soul.

I feel that soul also resides in the lamp's flame. We understand each other (sometimes carefully gauging their mood) and converse.

Alongside these machines and lamps that have survived through the thoughts of many people,

I want to continue lighting warm flames, staying close to them.

 

 

Fifth Generation: Yuka Bessho

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If you're interested in learning more about our company, you can find additional information in past articles published in Japanese media.

Please take a look at the linked articles (use Google Translate for Japanese-only articles).

・2018 Asahi Shimbun (&M)  https://www.asahi.com/and/m/article/15786390

・2019   Lmaga  https://www.lmaga.jp/news/2019/06/68564/

・2020   JOUNETSU - TAIRIKU  https://www.mbs.jp/jounetsu/2020/09_13.shtml

・2023 Sumitomo Electric Hard Metal Co., Ltd. (English)    https://www.sumitool.com/en/column/column_01.html

・2025 marie claire  https://marieclairejapon.com/culture/228182/

・2021 Osaka NEWS (TV Osaka News)

・2024 youtube  PROCESS  X

Regarding Overseas Expansion

 

We are currently considering the introduction of our hurricane lamps and oil lamps to international markets, where the allure of flame is deeply appreciated. During the era of our third-generation successor, overseas exports served as our principal sales channel, and as the fifth generation, I am determined to embrace this challenge once again.

We believe that those who visit this page are individuals of refined sensibility, who recognize the timeless beauty of a living flame.

It would be our great honor if you could kindly share with us the country from which you are viewing this page, as well as whether our story and our lamps have captured your interest.

 

We sincerely thank you for your attention and consideration.

Our lamps are not yet available for shipping overseas or for use outside Japan.

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