The horn comb on my dressing table glows with a warm amber light. Engraved faintly on its back are the characters “Zhou Ji”—a memento from my grandmother before she passed: “This is the craft of Master Zhou by Suzhou Creek. It’s intangible cultural heritage; keep it as a memory.” Recently, I tracked down Master Zhou’s workshop in Jiangnan, and only then did I understand: this comb holds the breath of a century-old craft.
Time in the Workshop: The Intangible Code of Slow Craftsmanship
Master Zhou’s workshop lies deep in Tongli Ancient Town, Suzhou. A stone path turns, and amid white walls and black-tiled roofs hangs a faded wooden sign—“Zhou Yongxing Comb & Broom Workshop.” Under the eaves dangles a bunch of dried wormwood, releasing a faint herbal scent when the wind blows. At 78, Master Zhou hunches over a wooden table, left hand cradling a half-cut water buffalo horn, right hand gripping a fine file. As the blade glides, the milky horn gradually takes shape into comb teeth. “Haste makes waste here,” he says without looking up. “A horn block must air-dry for three years. Sawing, splitting, shaving, polishing—72 steps. Skip one, and it’s not a ‘Zhou Ji’ comb.”
In the corner lie hundreds of horn blocks, varying shades of brown-yellow, each telling its age. “This one,” he picks one up, tapping it with a knuckle, “was collected five years ago. Needs two more years to mature.” Good horn, he explains, must be “translucent but not shadowy,” with even density and no impurities—a selection method passed down by ancestors, one machines can’t replicate. Sunlight slants through the wooden window, catching the calluses on his palms—worn down by fifty years of filing. On the wall hangs his “Intangible Cultural Heritage Inheritor” certificate, its edges frayed. “When I was young, this felt heavy. Now it’s my anchor—keeping the craft alive, passing it on.”
Every Step Holds Living Memory: The Warmth of Handmade Craft
The most patience-testing step is “tooth-carving.” Master Zhou secures the horn block in a wooden clamp, angling the file at 30 degrees. With a flick of his wrist, a comb tooth slowly “grows.” “Too steep, and it pricks the scalp; too shallow, and it won’t hug the hairline. It’s all feel,” he says. Apprentices once trained for three years just to carve teeth, wasting ten blocks daily. “Now machines carve fast and neat, but they lack… life. No ‘breath’.”
Polishing demands even more care. He uses coarse sandpaper to smooth edges, fine sandpaper for luster, then rubs tea oil into the teeth. “Tea oil is an old recipe—it makes the comb smoother, gentler on hair.” Holding a finished comb up to the light: “See these tips? Rounded like drizzle in Jiangnan. They glide with your hair, no pulling, no scraping.” Finally, he wraps it in cloth. “Take this. Tell the young people—handmade things have warmth.”
From Workshop to Dressing Table: Heritage as Living Tradition
Today, Master Zhou’s apprentice, Xiao Lu—a “post-95s” girl—carries on the craft. She once thought handmade “old-fashioned” until three years under Master Zhou changed her mind: “Now clients don’t say ‘buy’—they say, ‘I want a comb with a story.’” Her phone holds old photos: her grandfather crafting combs in the workshop, her father carrying a wooden crate to peddle them. “We’re not just making combs. We’re passing on a slice of Jiangnan daily life.”
As I leave, Master Zhou gifts me a small horn scrap: “Keep it. Maybe when you have grandchildren, we’ll carve another comb together.” The “Zhou Ji” comb on my dressing table now feels like a cultural emblem—recording Jiangnan’s humidity and sunlight, the fingerprints and heartbeat of old craftsmen, and proving: intangible heritage isn’t a museum specimen. It’s warmth passed from one pair of hands to another.
Next time I comb my hair, I’ll remember the “sha-sha” of the file in the workshop, and Master Zhou’s words: “Good craft makes the user feel—the comb understands you.”
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