Laser-carved melons lead Vietnam fruit fetish in Year of Rooster

This picture taken on January 24, 2017 shows Nguyen Van Minh inspecting a freshly laser-carved watermelon at his workshop in Hanoi. Apart from traditional flowers such as peach blossom, Vietnamese this year are looking for unique fruits to decorate their houses during Lunar New Year, known locally as Tet, with significant meanings behind those fruits. / AFP PHOTO / HOANG DINH Nam

This picture taken on January 24, 2017, shows Nguyen Van Minh inspecting a freshly laser-carved watermelon at his workshop in Hanoi. Apart from traditional flowers such as peach blossom, Vietnamese this year are looking for unique fruits to decorate their houses during Lunar New Year, known locally as Tet, with significant meanings behind those fruits. AFP

HANOI, Vietnam — After learning to use a laser engraving machine in a Vietnamese engineering school, Nguyen Van Minh is now putting the technology to an unexpected use: decorating fruit.

It is a modern twist on the traditional custom of hand-carving designs into watermelons on the occasion of the lunar new year, a holiday known as Tet in Vietnam that kicks off on January 28.

“Laser carving is more accurate and better for small patterns. Plus, the designs are more diverse,” the 27-year-old entrepreneur told AFP as a laser beam rapidly etched an elaborate rooster design into the green rind of a bowling ball-sized melon.

From giant pomelos to gold-dusted coconuts, Vietnam’s markets fill up with an array of novelty fruits ahead of Tet.

The designer produce is often gifted to colleagues and relatives, or kept at home as decorations.

Minh’s Hanoi-based company is now churning out scores of decorated and polished melons at a fraction of the speed that it takes traditional carvers to chisel away at the fruit’s peel by hand.

In the Chinese zodiac’s Year of the Rooster, the bird is without a doubt this season’s must have emblem.

Other popular designs include dragons, phoenixes and messages wishing good fortune or wealth.

Yet at about $1.50 to $3.50 a pop, Minh says his company has yet to be graced by riches.

“Our profits are not good, but we still want to do it because this is a new business, and also because we’re passionate about it,” he told AFP.

As far as wishes for the new year, Minh says he only has one: a fruitful business. CBB

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