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Bugyotsuji

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Bugyotsuji last won the day on July 2

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About Bugyotsuji

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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. That bottom one says Hokuto Shichisei.(The dragon’s tail probably indicating Polaris the Pole star.)
  2. Whoah! I just took it as a seasonal symbol of the New Year. (The surface does look like glutinous rice though…)
  3. There are so many ways you can look at this, and there may never be a convincing answer. You could even say for example that the Shippō pattern itself developed from people looking at the stars, and maybe seeing random patterns. In Japan of course they would not have seen the same Mediterranean mythical figures or creature shapes up there, though you do find allusions to the Hokuto shichisei 北斗七星 One of my netsuke could be a star map, but that is only one interpretation of it and other possibilities remain. I do not feel the need to come down on one side or another. My own feeling is that we are free to look at Shippō patterns and make mental associations, and that such poetic lateral association or subtle allusion is an active feature of Japanese art.
  4. Shippō Mon (Chirashi) Sukashi Tsuba 七宝文散透鐔 (Scattered) Shippō pattern perforations (The rest is Mei and tsuba physical features.)
  5. Bugyotsuji

    Enjoy!

    That is so unusual! Is there no end to the imaginative Tsuba cameo world? (Besides, I have a soft spot for orchids in Tōsōgu.)
  6. I have a Sukekane Tantō blade dated Meiji 2 (1869) in black urushi Inaba Koshiraé with silver chrysanthemum style fittings, plus rings. No proof, but common sense says the Koshiraé has to be contemporary with the blade, i.e. c 1870. NBTHK Hozon
  7. Dan, your post comes up in weird typeset format. It looked as though you were quoting from somewhere…(?) See:
  8. Whose words are those Dan, yours, AI’s or someone else’s?
  9. Thanks for the video Joseph. Pleased to report that they have recently crossed the 3 million yen target, meeting the conditions set for starting off the latest project.
  10. Re AI above, it mistakenly attempted to translate the smith name 馬面 Bamen, producing the expression ‘horse-faced’.
  11. Here’s another nata tsuba, probably younger than yours, Dale.
  12. Not yet mentioned, and may not be relevant here, but some larger blades were created especially for execution grounds.
  13. Just one Nakago ana?
  14. WOWZ!!!!!!!!! What. A. Contrast!!!!!!!!!! That doesn’t even need a second clean! Oh, …no you didn’t! (Overspend)
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