Content / Audio/Video /
Hanko
By Roman Mars and Daniel Semo
Listen:
Online
39 min
Hanko, sometimes called insho, are the carved stamp seals that people in Japan often use in place of signatures.
Hanko seals are made from materials ranging from plastic to jade and are about the size of a tube of lipstick. The end of each hanko is etched with its owner’s name, usually in the kanji pictorial characters used in Japanese writing. This carved end is then dipped in red cinnabar paste and impressed on a document as a form of identification.