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Bugyotsuji

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Bugyotsuji last won the day on May 18

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About Bugyotsuji

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    Japan
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    Japanese history, Tanegashima, Nihonto, Netsuke, Katchu, fast cars, J-E-J translation

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    Piers D

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  1. Kmad, looks like one sticker over another…(?) Old Japanese price tag???
  2. The remains of three price stickers I see! The dark dyed signature seal looks as if it was added later, following along some of the ivory cracks. For this reason my gut feeling is that any reading will not help us at all. Ready to be proved wrong of course! Good luck with your project. It’ll be interesting to see what others say.
  3. Another signed Sadamune!!!???!!!
  4. Only coz your bird’s feet reminded me of it, but here is a Kaga-zōgan kozuka with 5 egrets. Cousins? Congratulations on your tsuba!
  5. Yesterday's meeting and update indicated that 78 people have contributed JPY2,430,000 so far, just shy of the 2.5 million yen they are initially aiming for by the end of this month. A plan for the polishing of the Odachi was also handed out, to take place over the first three cold months of 2027 when rust will not be too much a problem. I had a chance to see their Muromachi period blades display, including upstairs a 1499 Katsumitsu/Sadamitsu joint-work naginata that Jussi might recognize. Photos: A B C
  6. That’s the stuff, yes. Functions like sandpaper. Also widely used for polishing lacquer. 砥草 Tokusa, often pronounced Togusa.
  7. Hmmm… good spot. It could be used as part of the process for making a Tanegashima, granted, but it’s not strictly related to Tanegashima. Apologies. Hint, why is the Japanese name Tokusa?
  8. Not quite in the slot just yet.
  9. Apparently yes, it is a type of horsetail grass. (Had to check the English before I could answer that!)
  10. No, not the answer to this quiz, (they’re light and hollow so would not be much use as whips) …but it is the answer to the next quiz I was lining up.
  11. May have had this question before, but apart from their decorative appeal what were/are these plants used for? (The wife brought these home last night.) If you know, then let’s hear it! Cheating OK. Closer…
  12. On the ethics of restoration, I have been thinking a little more recently. If you look at the photo below, a lot that came my way last week, you'll see there are bits and bobs that would normally get thrown out in any kura clean-up. Pieces of attached rag and wire look like junk. And that would be the end of their history. Occasionally I will find a powder flask body that has lost its cap and/or other fittings. Conversely in the photo you can see a necklace string with two caps, (one primer flask, one coarse powder flask) but missing flask bodies. There is an apostle 'hayago' tube with no cap, and the remains of a kurigata from a powder flask. Fairly useless on their own. What looks like a coin purse has a slit in the side for insertion/ removal of musketball. This at least should clean up a smidgen. These things, made with design and purpose, need to be saved. If I can find a new life for any of them, I will.
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