Even at twice regular Daiso price, this handy item is still great for summer travel in Japan

With the rainy season here, this umbrella companion is a Daiso-premium bargain.
Having flipped the calendar to June, weβre clearly not in spring anymore, but many Japanese people would argue that we havenβt really made it to summer just yet. Thatβs because weβre at the start of tsuyu, or βthe rainy season,β a roughly month-long stretch of wet weather that precedes the idyllic fun-in-the-sun section of summer.
As a matter of fact, Tokyo is getting drenched with heavy rains at the time of this writing, which is why weβre happy that we recently hit up Daiso and picked up an extremely handy item that weβre going to be putting to good use in the weeks to come.

This is actually one of Daisoβs premium-priced products, costing double what the chain usually charges for its items. Of course, with Daiso being Japanβs most famous 100 yen shop, that means that the Telescopic Umbrella Cover is still only 200 yen (US$1.30), and for how useful it is, that price feels like a bargain.
Even with Japanβs excellent train/subway network, life here tends to involve a lot of walking, since youβre at least going to need to get to/from the station. But while an umbrella will keep the rain off you while youβre outside, once you head inside or onto a train, youβve now got a sopping shaft of damp fabric thatβs going to wet your clothes, or the clothes of anyone standing close to you on one of Japanβs famously crowded trains.

Daisoβs Telescopic Umbrella Cover is here to solve that problem. Essentially a plastic cup with an accordion-like construction, itβs conveniently compact when scrunched down to its smallest size, but expands to accommodate umbrellas.

Simply insert your umbrella into the cover and push until it reaches your desired length.



Daisoβs case has a number of advantages compared to the disposable thin plastic bag-style slip-on covers provided at some shopping centers and stores in Japan. For one, thereβs no trash generated with Daisoβs reusable cover, and unlike the disposable versions, the Daiso cover works not only with long umbrellas with pointy tips, but shorter folding umbrellas, the kind most popular with travelers, too.

Also, when you take your umbrella back out from a plastic-bag cover, youβre left with a bag of water from all the drops that dripped off the fabric. Daisoβs cover instead has a removable cap at the tip so that you can pour out the water in an appropriate place.

And while some umbrellas come with cloth covers to be slipped over them when wet but not in use, you then end up with a soggy fabric cover thatβll need to be washed once you get home, and repeated washings can damage its moisture absorbency. On the other hand, since Daisoβs case is made of plastic, you can simply wipe off the interior surfaces and itβll be ready to go again.
Really, the only drawback we could see is that the case didnβt completely cover an extra-large 70-centimeter (27.6-inch) long umbrella that we included in our testing, but even then, it provided a long area length of protection.

Daisoβs Telescopic Umbrella Cover even has a chain so that you can clip it to your bag for easier carrying, and with sudden showers being something that can happen even after the βrainy seasonβ is done, we might have one of these with us all summer long.
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