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Everything posted by ROKUJURO
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Wakizashi Nōshū no jū Kanetsuji for sale. Muromachi blade.
ROKUJURO replied to Fred420's topic in Swords and Edged Weapons
That's what I thought. So it is a typo in your text above: ....This blade is a Muromachi period Wakizashi signed: Nōshū no jū Kanetsugu (濃州之住兼辻).... -
Hi Travis, Calvary is not exactly the same as CAVALRY.
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Wakizashi Nōshū no jū Kanetsuji for sale. Muromachi blade.
ROKUJURO replied to Fred420's topic in Swords and Edged Weapons
Frédéric, can KANETSUJI (兼辻) be read as KANETSUGU as well? -
To me, all three look cast and of no collector's value. Better photos on a plain dark background in correct orientation might prove me wrong.
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Not much to see on these photos. A rather neglected KO-WAKIZASHI (see my PM please) in HIRA ZUKURI shape. KANENAGA (YAMASHIRO TEGAI school) with these 包永 KANJI would be a very famous name in KAMAKURA era. Later generations of that school used 兼永, but our experts will have to decide the reading. For that, please post a vertical (tip-upwards, light from the side) photo of the NAKAGO in the TRANSLATION section (here, not IMGUR). Better photos will show what you have there. For the moment, please refrain from any attempt to clean or polish it!
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Looks like a pile of bayonets with - possibly - one Japanese WWII sword. In case you are interested in Japanese swords, I suggest you take this one and make some detail photos of it on a plain dark background, take it apart so that details are visible, and then our militaria experts will certainly be able to help.
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Travis, no need to apologize! Just trying to help! You wouldn't get the desired response in the FOR SALE section!
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Travis, you are posting in the FOR SALE section. Perhaps try in the TOSOGU section with photos made on a plain DARK background so details become visible.
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Hi Lea-Ann, If you could use a plain dark, non-reflecting background for photographing, we could see much more. A white background reduces the contrast as you can see yourself. What can be seen from these poor photos is, these arrows are of the simplest war type. They may indeed be as old as EDO JIDAI. The KANJI on the shaft may be a name of an archer or a dedication; that would not be unusual. It certainly has no effect on the value. The long YANONE (= arrow-tip) (single photo of an arrow) does not look Japanese to me; it might be a replacement. Better detail photos will allow for a closer assessment.
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Restoration possible??
ROKUJURO replied to Ronald Aguirre's topic in General Nihonto Related Discussion
....and all photos made on a plain dark/black background, in a dark room with spotlight! -
Konrad, it is a counterfeit, not a replica. Good replica are more difficult to identify; they are made close to the authentic items. This one above is very easy to spot in case you have seen a certain number of swords. It is all a matter of experience, as so often in life!
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....and you will not get a genuine hand-made Japanese sword for $ 200.--, so this may also be an indication.
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Justyn, certainly a good memory item!
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Yes, it does mean No. 4
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Calabrese, congratulations! A very nice MUNEKATSU TSUBA with OMODAKA leaves and a KOZUKA HITSU in gourd shape! The surface might have been treated with something water-repellent, but I don't think it is disturbing. What you see as damage is the result of a YAKITE technique, produced intentionally for a WABI SABI effect! All very good!
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Kogitsunemaru.
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It is not cast, and it is a TSUBA in HEIANJO style, probably using an older (early EDO) TOSHO style TSUBA as a base for testing or trying to apply some embellishment.
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Not really. The gold value may be less than the artistic and cultural value in some items, depending on the artist.
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TWB, please sign all posts with your first name so we could address you in a polite manner. It is a rule here . Your TSUBA set is quite interesting although I think I see some patina issues, but that can be fixed. What you see as a GENNO hammer on the first TSUBA is in fact a forging hammer. GENNO are different:
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Hi Bruce, that may well be. It is the same in the world of archaeology where they created their special vocabulary, not looking at the "normal" established terminology. I feel that situation must be confusing for new collectors, and for me, the question arises who should learn the correct terms?
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Matt, that may well have been in the distant past. Do you have any evidence for that? The actual definition is: " A dirk is a long-bladed thrusting dagger It is most famously known as the traditional sidearm of Scottish Highland clansmen and officers, serving as both a formidable combat weapon and a symbol of cultural honour....." A dagger is undoubtedly a two-sided thrusting knife. There are indeed dagger-shaped bayonets (Switzerland) but the one shown above is not one of them.
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Tony, it's funny that you are saying that! In the knifemaker's language, an unusually thick knife (some customers seem to like that) is mockingly called a "sharp prybar"! With that KASANE, I would have expected a MIHABA of 50 mm!
