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Luc T

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Everything posted by Luc T

  1. Here the mei from a Yamato Fujiwara Ietsugu. Also Tameshigiri. Metropolitan museum
  2. Mark, do you have a picture of the mabezashi?
  3. Yamato: Haruta, Iwai or Neo school.
  4. It seems To be a kabuto from the Yamato Haruta. I suppose early edo. Why? Shape and signature. State of the koshimaki.
  5. Luc T

    Paris Exhibition

    The collections are the property of high esteemed JAS members. Top collectors!
  6. Thaks guys, much appreciated!
  7. I can only repeat Uwe and Ian. Permanent wakidate are very unusual. Buyer beware...
  8. Does someone know who we can contact from the Usa token societies? There must be important armor-collectors in the States, not?
  9. I think I am older...
  10. sorry, the picture was a bit small
  11. Our 2019 Yearbook received very good critics from our members, who got it for free as a reward for their loyal membership. Also this year, there are some very interesting and even indispensable articles for the serious armor collector. *Robert Burawoy: Ichiro and Ryotaro Fukutake, "the encouter with a contemporary armourer" *Jan Petterson: "the Yonezawa Matchlock" *Takemura Masao: "Momonari kabuto; their Cronology and local characteristics". … and more information about the Katchu-world. We still have some spare copies, so we are offering them now to non JAS members for the price of 50€ plus shipping 5€ please mail us to order: Jas@Japanese-armor.org
  12. I would also say meiji. But a good quality tourist or boys festival product. It is a copy of a kamakura era kabuto, the archaic but heroic era of the samurai.
  13. Brian, I have a vintage flyer somewhere from this firm, I will post it when I find it. They started working for the movie-companies in Japan. The interest for the samurai increased in the seventies and eighties, more and more people wanted a kind of 'relic' from this culture. Some of those movie prop katchushi were really good, and became famous., One of them, Ototsugu, was even listed in Sasama's Shin Katchushi Meikan. His work is sold for millions of Yen nowadays.
  14. Indeed, this is a modern armor. Made by a company that started making movie props for Kurosawa and co in the 70-80’.
  15. Luc T

    Kabuto Information

    That’s why I think that the nomenclature is a not so important and subjective. It changes over the years, and this evolution is still going on. It is more interesting to know where to situate the item in time and region. On the other hand, the ‘hour of the dog’ is a poetic description.
  16. Luc T

    Kabuto Information

    John, the applications, or kirigane have a long history. Your kabuto looks like an edo , west Japanese item. The school? Only a few schools used kirigane, and according the style of the hachi, I think you have a nice Haruta helmet in your collection.
  17. Not cheap, but a very interestin sword indeed! Good luck!
  18. Indeed, mr Peter Janssens museum becomes the Mekka for samurai-arts here in Europe. It does me thinking on the huge collections, founded by some nobles at the end of the 19th century. I can only recommend it.
  19. Thanks for sharing Bazza. Most of those tombs are found on Kyushu. But the state of preservation is really exeptional.
  20. DTI is indeed a great event, and also an opportunity to meet armor and sword people. Unfortunately, I can't make it this time, but our NKBKHK an JAS promotion booth will be present.
  21. Thanks for this very interestin explanation Malcolm. I’ve learned something! Obrigado
  22. Arigato gentlemen ( comes from the portugese word obrigado, thanks)
  23. We are happy to announce another interesting exhibition. the Japanese Armor Society helped the museum with the research of some unknown but true Treasures from their collection. "A Striking story | Portugal - Japan - 16th-20th Centuries " Exhibition at Galeria D. Luís | Palácio Nacional da Ajuda 30th November to 26th March Thurdays to Tuesdays 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. By means of screens, lacquers, cartography, armors, among other rare and fascinating objects, some exhibited for the first time, this exhibition tells the story of the encounter and reunion between Portugal and Japan over five centuries. A story manifest by astonishment and wonder but also by the distrust, with moments of approach, of quarrels, cut of relations and diplomacy. A story which tells as much by the written documentation, as by the material culture, the language, the exchange of the scientific knowledge, the art and the religion. The exhibition will be open to the public from November 30, 2018 to March 26, 2019, with a catalog in Portuguese and English of 173 pages, with scientific texts, chronology and color images. "A Striking Story. Portugal-Japan Centuries XVI-XX" presents items from private collectors and from public and private institutions, Portuguese and Japanese.
  24. For those who forgot, the topic is about the NKBKHK magazine. Having different meanings is a part of our society. Handeling this with respect is the message
  25. Two of our Japanese Armor Society members organised this nice exhibition in the iconic town of Rocamadour, France Thanks to Gregg Riffi and Xavier Durand. http://www.carcassonne.org/manifestations/samourai-art-et-symbolisme-du-japon
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