steepholm: (tree_face)
steepholm ([personal profile] steepholm) wrote2016-04-15 05:05 pm
Entry tags:

Goods and Services

I went to get a couple of keys cut today, and while standing in the key-cutting shop I was struck (not for the first time) by the rather strange assortment of things that such shops do. I may even have posted here about it before, but if so, I'm doing it again.

Keys, shoe repairs, trophies and umbrellas. Why just those things? What do they have in common?

In an underground arcade in Osaka a couple of weeks ago I passed a stall that sold exactly the same things (except the umbrellas) so I feel there must be some inexorable reason behind it beyond the random accumulation of associations in the minds of British shoppers.
gillo: (Default)

[personal profile] gillo 2016-04-15 05:14 pm (UTC)(link)
Well, shoe repairs of the sort they tend to do often seem to involve grinding - removing old heels/soles, shaping new ones to fit. Keys are also ground and cut to shape. Trophies are sold, I suspect, mainly because they use the same precise grinding and cutting machinery to engrave the names.

Umbrellas? We're in Britain. Everyone needs umbrellas.

[identity profile] steepholm.livejournal.com 2016-04-16 06:52 am (UTC)(link)
These are all fair points. "Grinder" would be a good name for one of these shops, if only it hadn't already been taken...