Get All Access for $5/mo

Soy Sauce Bottle Designer, Dead at 85, Was Inspired to Create in Destruction's Wake Hiroshima native Kenji Ekuan processed the tragic bombings into a creative fuel that resulted in a long and illustrious industrial design career.

By Geoff Weiss

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Tang Prize Foundation

With a career characterized by invention in the wake of destruction, Kenji Ekuan, the designer of the now-iconic Kikkoman soy sauce bottle, died on Sunday from a heart disorder at the age of 85.

Ekuan, a Hiroshima native, lost his sister and father in the bombings, but ultimately processed the tragedy into a kind of creative fuel. "Faced with that nothingness, I felt a great nostalgia for human culture," he told The New York Times in 2012. "I needed something to touch, to look at. Right then I decided to be a maker of things."

Perhaps best known for his teardrop-shaped soy sauce containers, with their drip-resistant red caps, Ekuan is also the industrial designer behind certain Yamaha motorcycle model and several long-nosed bullet trains on Japan's Shinkansen high-speed railway line.

Kikkoman soy sauce bottle

Kikkoman Soy Sauce
Image credit: Wiki2.org

Related: Remembering Hobie Alter, the Surfing Visionary Who Invented a Sport and a Culture

For Ekuan, a former monk who once considered following his father's footsteps into Buddhist priesthood, industrial design became its own means of salvation, according to the Times. "Objects have their own world. Making an object means imbuing it with its own spirit," he wrote in a 2002 memoir.

After winning the Kikkoman contract in his twenties, it took Ekuan three years and 100 total prototypes to complete the soy sauce bottle design. He was inspired by memories of his mother pouring soy sauce from a half-gallon bottle into a tabletop dispenser, reports the The Japan Times. Today, more than 300 million total carafes have been sold.

In 1957, Ekuan founded his own firm, GK Design Group, which he continued to helm as chairman until his death. The bombings forever marked his life's work, as Ekuan once wrote that he "heard the voices of street cars, bicycles and other objects mangled and abandoned, saying they had wished to have been utilized more," according to the The Japan Times.

Related: 10 Inspirational Robin Williams Quotes

Geoff Weiss

Former Staff Writer

Geoff Weiss is a former staff writer at Entrepreneur.com.

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Editor's Pick

Side Hustle

This Former Starbucks Employee Started a Side Hustle That's Making More Than $70,000 a Month — and He's Not Done Yet

When Tom Saar moved to New York City, he spotted a lucrative business opportunity.

Business News

Is One Company to Blame for Soaring Rental Prices in the U.S.?

The FBI recently raided a major corporate landlord while investigating a rent price-fixing scheme. Here's what we know.

Business News

Amazon Has a Blank Book Problem: Buyers Report Receiving Fakes of Bestselling UFO Book

The book looked fine on the outside, but the inside was out-of-this-world.

Business Ideas

63 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2024

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for entrepreneurs to pursue in 2024.

Business News

Paramount Leadership Alludes to Layoffs If Merger Does Not Go Through

Paramount is awaiting approval on its merger with Skydance Media from majority shareholder Shari Redstone.

Marketing

6 SEO Tips to Help You Rank in the New Era of Quality Content

What is the best SEO strategy after Google's March 2024 core update? Here's what you need to know.