Hello, everyone.
This is Enta.
How does the finish look on the frame made using the no-clamp method?
There are some areas where no trowel finishing is done at all, while in other cases, the surface is lightly troweled and then lightly sprayed, right?
Which one is better?

In my experience, if you don’t use a trowel at all, the site supervisor won’t be happy with the finish, but the government agency won’t say anything.
On the other hand, if you use a trowel just a little, the site supervisor is satisfied, but the government officials react by saying, “You don’t need to use a trowel at all!”
Well, then!
I know you probably think that, but it's true.
Site supervisors really do want to get the job done right.
Take a look at the existing formwork around here. It’s been smoothed out with a trowel—it looks nice, doesn’t it?
Japanese people definitely love those beautiful legal frameworks!!
I prefer a legal framework with clear boundaries.
Me too.
When I just keep blowing like that, making it all bumpy, it even makes me feel like I'm doing something wrong.
No matter how much people tell me that's fine.
A "no-iron" style—where you just use the iron to cut the hair slightly and then give it a light blow-dry from above—is just right.

Just applying a hot iron to the surface alone makes a big difference, after all.
Even if the design doesn't call for trowel finishing, applying a light trowel finish can increase your satisfaction with the work.
Once you make it, it will last for about 50 years.
In this day and age, there’s a very good chance it will last for over 100 years.
What will I leave behind for future generations? Will I even be able to leave anything behind?
Back in the day, slope work wasn't the kind of job that made it onto maps, was it?
These days, they appear on Google Maps Street View.
Perhaps we’ve entered an era where slopes are marked on maps.
That’s exactly why you want to make it look as nice as possible, even if just a little.
See you later.



