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Everything posted by Rivkin
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I also would probably guess Hizen, but it was mentioned only 220 times or so. This school is much more popular. Kirill R.
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Well, here is another brain teaser, equally malicious to the last one. Except here the work is a very typical style for the smith, though I particularly like the quality of this example. It is signed. The smith belongs to the school which is for some reason one of the most often referred to by its name on the forum! Actually I did a few searches and it came out as the most often referred to, but by a small margin I did not try very hard - so one of the most. Anyone cares to make a guess?
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Rivkin replied to BIG's topic in Sword Shows, Events, Community News and Legislation Issues
There are indeed nastier collecting areas than nihonto. And far more dangerous ones. Nihonto is special in a sense that 99% of expert-researchers at worst are translators of papers and basic Japanese books, at best are capable of memorizing kantei features without giving much thought to whether these rules actually have a solid support in terms of signatures/provenance/other data. In no other collecting area a dealer with a website filled with translated pages from here and there would be automatically lauded as an Academic Intellectual. In no other collecting area the most important publication of a year, if not a decade would be something like if you take papers of this color, and the length of a sword is such, and the length of a signature is such, you can then get papers of that color. Kirill R. -
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Rivkin replied to BIG's topic in Sword Shows, Events, Community News and Legislation Issues
Nihonto community at its usual. What puzzles me is how addicted it is to words Academic, Scientific, Research, Study. Otherwise it would be interesting to read seminar's publication, if it exists (probably it does not). Kirill R. -
Rumor-wise I heard is that non-public guidance for basically all countries is to make sure the packages are held for at least a month at a warehouse. EMS from Japan is now being slowly loaded on container ships. Kirill R.
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To me comes as classic Mino, looks like late Muromachi to early Edo. Sorry, did not notice the yakidashi -more likely early shinto then I guess. Kirill R.
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They are definitely similar to 17th century European works, but my guess is there are too many small differences. They are flatter, uniformly patinated to black (as Namban Japanese works tend to), with deep cuts which go through the entire object, rather than at least big portion of the lines formed by more shallow engraving. If those were European, one would indeed expect to see more "unquestionably European" guards, but 99% of the type are all "sort of", and are too similar to one another rather than to any random selection of period European works. Were there loads of such items in Indochina or China or anywhere else on the Continent, the continental theory would have been an interesting alternative. Kirill R.
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Good deal? Koto Wakizashi for 799$
Rivkin replied to Blazeaglory's topic in Auctions and Online Sales or Sellers
The international air mail is stopped officially to most countries, and for the remaining it defacto stopped functioning sharp about 10 days ago. Everything before went through smoothly, everything after gets stuck. I suspect because this is a severe cut down from a much longer sword, what was there could have been a kinzogan mei or alike to, say, Masamune. So it was removed during the polish even without submitting it, as nonsense to begin with. I like uda for it because of utsuri, nagare close to ha and nie forming long, narrow stripes. P.S. I thought Showa 31 is 1956. Kirill R. -
Good deal? Koto Wakizashi for 799$
Rivkin replied to Blazeaglory's topic in Auctions and Online Sales or Sellers
Looks nice for the price. Late Muromachi. Maybe Uda? Hamon looks tired and not very distinctive, which might be the photos. However good luck getting anything in the mail from Japan today. It is non-functional. Kirill R. -
AOI Art Sword Videos on Youtube
Rivkin replied to Lance's topic in General Nihonto Related Discussion
I feel these terms are more commonly used in the US compared to Japan, in part as they tend to mean somewhat different things to different people, but here is a personal opinion: Soshu very seldom works out in sashikomi. Bizen with long choji and prominent utsuri can be easily denigraded by careless application of hadori. And very often - it is. Even in the hands of people who are part of the top 10, or even top 5 polishers in the world. Kirill R. -
Interesting hosho interpretation: http://nihonto.us/TAKAHASHI%20HIDETSUGU%20JL.htm Feels like it goes back to some Naotane's school works and then Sendai at earlier times. Kirill R.
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Suishinshi Masahide I guess... But that's his personal statement. Might be applicable to Sukehiro's style, might be not. Kirill R.
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I don't think this particular claimant means that, but there have been studies which demonstrate much tighter material property distributions and much smaller grain size for shinto. Shinto is not as good looking, but good looks in nihonto do stem from inability to transport heat fast, so that extremely non-uniform formation of martensite can happen. Kirill R.
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Thank you very much, gentlemen, much obliged. To be honest, I still need a bit of luck to produce good images and there are couple more people who use a similar/related technique. This being said, the recent travel troubles for me mean collapse of all agreements to shoot kokuho in Japan, and knowing the Pain that went into making those, I am worried the chances to have it rescheduled some time in the future are problematic... Kirill R.
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Well, hopefully that's a more rewarding market, and they probably do read more compared to nihonto experts... But the problem with ALL these books is that they ALL use photographs from DNP. You can have publication rights to each for 100$. Any kokuho. But... The photographs were taken by museum photographers who could not care less for the fact they photograph swords. Administred by curators who in Japanese museums are certainly not sword people (even in sword museums!), but graduates of general-venue curatorial or art history studies. The quality is abysmal. Only the most brilliant Soshu gets through the foam of poor technique employed. DNP is what resulted in tons of books publishes, since its actually very cheap to publish a nihonto book with the very top grades. And it destroyed quality sword photography in Japan, at least in "official venues". Kirill R.
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True said! Oracle bone script imho. Thank you for a nice show. Kirill R.
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I don't know what the article is about, but I very much doubt its a traditional Ainu weapon. Feels like late Edo, or more likely Meiji to Showa gimmick signature, maybe by a part Ainu Japanese swordsmith. Plenty of hirazukuri waki found in Hokkaido and further north and west, none are signed. Kirill R.
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Is Covid 19 going to kill the NMB?
Rivkin replied to Peter Bleed's topic in General Nihonto Related Discussion
I don't mind basic questions. The bane of internet societies is the lack of deep questions. Or having 15 answers which can be replaced with a simple "Dude!". Kirill R. -
I spoke with couple of people mass submitting to NTHK NPO as well as had a phone call with someone who is a part of the organization. Obviously there are people far better informed at this point, and the statement below is NOT TO BE TAKEN as official information, as its not in their materials that we all see, so it is just a rumor, but: As part of regular shinsa (don't know if it includes the US shinsa, but it might), NTHK NPO no longer assigns scores above 78 to blades. Also, the score of 78 is capped to no more than 5% of submissions. Kirill R.
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carving and writing on blades
Rivkin replied to Steffieeee's topic in General Nihonto Related Discussion
Being extremely direct - I heard this being stated hundreds of times and yet to see a single blade decisively proving the point. All horimono are placed exactly where they should be for the given image or fuller, and the given period or tradition. Quite a few of such decorate blades do have fukure or ware which sticks out in some other place. Since the majority of really bad defects would be in the ha, one would expect some clever way to be devised to cover them up, but nothing short of very aggressive application of keisho does not come to mind. I know quite a few collectors of koto who despise elaborate horimono since it conceals much of hada or could have been added later etc. Still, placing horimono was quite expensive at the time. Kirill R. -
Interesting! Sorry can't see - is it like Echizen Rai, Rai Kuniyasu? Kirill R.
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Lovely silver mounted tanto, help on mei please.
Rivkin replied to Ron STL's topic in Translation Assistance
Sorry, I meant other Muromachi generations being sai-jo-saku. That seemed quite unusual. Kirill R. -
Shipping Nihonto from Japan
Rivkin replied to swordnoob's topic in General Nihonto Related Discussion
No problem whatsoever with receiving EMS in the US, default shipping method. Kirill R. -
Lovely silver mounted tanto, help on mei please.
Rivkin replied to Ron STL's topic in Translation Assistance
[?] I might be completely in the wrong here, but I doubt this rating was done by Fujishiro. Can be someone retyping his information, though I am saying this without actually looking. Kirill R.