Jump to content

Bugyotsuji

Gold Tier
  • Posts

    14,541
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    288

Bugyotsuji last won the day on March 28

Bugyotsuji had the most liked content!

About Bugyotsuji

Profile Information

  • Gender
    Male
  • Location:
    Japan
  • Interests
    Japanese history, Tanegashima, Nihonto, Netsuke, Katchu, fast cars, J-E-J translation

Profile Fields

  • Name
    Piers D

Recent Profile Visitors

The recent visitors block is disabled and is not being shown to other users.

Bugyotsuji's Achievements

Emperor

Emperor (14/14)

  • Conversation Starter
  • One Year In
  • One Month Later
  • Week One Done
  • Dedicated

Recent Badges

13.6k

Reputation

  1. Both Shioda and Shiota are common readings of this family name 塩田. I have a friend who says ‘Shiota’.
  2. Actually I particularly like Yoshifusa too. Today sadly I was with people and did not take many photos, *although I do have some Yoshifusa pics somewhere from earlier exhibitions.
  3. They ask you to place a sticker against which sword you liked best.
  4. Check out 'This is not a Samurai', and Tetsuya Noguchi. (That should give you some background to this genius guy! Definitely weird, but intricately and uncannily accurate.) PS Re 'ages'. Different times in history.
  5. She said that it was a man wearing a miniature 'replica' traditional armour sitting on a yellow rubber duck, the two elements representing different ages, the whole designed to clash or create disharmony, and that it was a work that particularly appeals to her.
  6. Here’s a pic or two I took about 7 years ago, before the owner sold it. The nick
  7. One of our NBTHK members is a Bizen potter and after much effort he eventually succeeded in making a full-sized version in fired clay. Another member creates detailed exact-scale copies in wood, down to the nick in the blade edge. These are not cheap but there is a waiting list for his work, the Sanchōmō and other famous blades. Even the Mei are faithfully chiselled in.
  8. Agreed, and the material looks traditionally Chinese.
  9. I have one tsuba that came wrapped in twine, using the nakago ana and ryo hitsu ana; it did seem as if it had once been used as a netsuke. In a general lot at an antiques fair it looked a mess, but when I cut away the string it turned back into a nice tsuba. I think it is quite possible that spare tsuba were carried, and even put to use as netsuke. In that sense, they would not really need a loop or jump ring attachment, but it's hard to think of what else yours could have been used for.
  10. Yes, and from the flying carp streamers and 'shobu' flowers on the reverse, probably also to commemorate his first Boy's Day. (To be handed out over two days, later in the month of May?)
  11. It’s the latter, not for Togo Heihachiro, an interesting medallion!
  12. And the long 〆or メ at the top may be to mark where the lid closes tightest.
  13. Hard to tell, but the colour alone might suggest a young peach rather than a persimmon…(?)
×
×
  • Create New...