200 times Pictures

To make a thing X200

Something blue, logo?

It is a 200X picture.

 

Something logo?

The blue lines line up beautifully.

 


Is it some kind of logo?

 


The material seems to be plastic.

 


There are a lot of options, so let's take a look at the photos.

Chakkaman

It was a convenient goods chukkaman.

 


It was an enlarged photo of the "TOKAI" logo.

 


I don't understand this.

 


Chakkaman is a high-performance product that makes the 100 yen lighter easier to use.

 


Great for lighting fireworks and candles at camp.

 


It is an excellent item among human inventions that is cheap for that.

 

a Basketball?

Today's X200 picture.

 

a Basketball?
Orange color, fine dots.




is this basketball?




There is a gradation, so it may be a print.




Even if it's printing, it doesn't seem to be a process printing that produces color with four colors.




So what is the correct answer for 1x?

canned juice. carrot
It was a can of carrot juice.




It's an enlargement of the part of the carrot pattern.




Can manufacturing ink for printing on cans.




Whether this is printed directly on the can or printed on film and stretched on the can

I do not understand.




It's a special print where the dots are orange and the background is red or white.




For now, let's have a drink.

Stone?

Here is today's X200 picture.

 

a stone?

Rough surface

 


Gradation of brown and black?

 


Is it stone?

 


It's solid for now.

 


Let's take a look at it once.

 

a table of Yakiniku restaurant

This is yesterday's yakiniku restaurant.

 


It was a nice presentation with decent meat and no time limit.

 


I had a blast for 4 hours with my junior who quit the company and just the two of us.

 


It was a nice day.

 


And here's a picture of the table.

 


A worn butcher's table.

fiber? cushion?

Then, this one.

fiber? cushion?

 

Is it a plastic cushion?

 


Is it fiber clothing?

 


For the time being, it is likely to be white and empty.

 


Are some of the fibrous things stuck together or melted?

 


Now let's take a closer look at the photo

 

Tissue paper

It's a tissue paper that everyone knows.

 


For foreigners, Japanese seem to be a rich country where they don't get free tissue paper.

 


It's true that I sometimes don't accept the tissues handed out on the street when it's troublesome.

 


Looking at the history of tissue, it seems that the invention and improvement were made in the United States in 1920.

 


Many of the 100 yen inventions of this era were born in the United States.

 


At that time, the United States was a developing country chasing Europe such as the United Kingdom.

Brown Chips?

Today, I show you a brown something.

Wooden chips?

Wood such as cork?

 


It seems that there is considerable gap.

 


Definitely brown for now.

 


It could be brown sugar.

 


Now let's multiply it by 1.

instant coffee powder

This powder was instant coffee.

 


Particles made by freeze-drying?

 


You have a beautiful gap.

 


Thanks to this gap, you can make instant coffee that melts cleanly and quickly.

 


For records, the inventor of freeze-dried coffee appears to be of Japanese descent.

In 1899, Dr. Satori Kato, a Japanese scientist living in Chicago, Illinois, USA, invented a technology to vacuum-dry coffee extract using volatile oil while researching the instant production of green tea. At the Pan American Exposition held in Buffalo, New York in 2003, it was unveiled under the name ``Soluble Coffee''.

 


However, it was Nestlé that succeeded in commercializing it.

 


Today, it has become a global product and many companies are competing with each other.

Brown Plant?

Today's 200x photo.

Brown Plant?

It's a fibrous object.

 


Is it some kind of plant?

 


Burnt or withered?

 


Here's a double photo.

a cigarrette

This time it was cigarettes.

 


Last time, it was a close-up of the filter, but on the contrary, it will be a photo of the side.

 


Well, it's probably brown withered.

 


Even so, it is a luxury item with a very long history, and I love it.

 


Should I stop or continue, let's postpone the conclusion anyway.

cotton?

It's been a while, but here's a 200x photo.

cotton?

Is it cotton?

 


It seems to be filled with white fibrous material.

 


It could be something different.

 


Could it be some kind of structure?

 


Then, let's make it a 1x photo.

 

a tabacco

It was cigarettes.

 


Cigarettes now an endangered species

 


I took a picture of the filter part of the mouthpiece.

 


It's just a filter, and it's beautifully detailed.

 


By the way, the material of the filter is cellulose acetate,

It becomes a relative of paper.

 


It is different from the so-called petroleum-derived plastic.

 


Even so, it is difficult to find a smoking area every day.