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Bugyotsuji last won the day on June 24
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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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Nicolas, nice design! Can you get a clearer shot of the Mei?
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Generally this kind of arabesque vine pattern is loosely described as: Karakusa moyo 唐草模様 Definitely unusual though and a goodly size.
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Dang Jean, I did not want to answer that here... grrr... Over the phone: I asked him if it was easy to remove, and after a moment's thought he said "Yes." He said to use 'a sanding eraser', but without actually seeing him doing that I would not like to encourage anyone here to try any such procedure. I suggested to him hopefully that such work should be done gently (yes/no?), and he agreed, saying that one should be careful not to expose the iron/steel surface of the tsuba. Well, that sounded pretty obvious, if not exactly easy to perform smoothly. The above answer will self-destruct in five minutes.
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Been doing a little digging around as I have a nice tsuba with a wet black appearance. A friend looked at it and immediately put it down. "Ibota," he muttered. "How can I remove it?", I asked. It seems that over the years there are some people who continue to apply this 'Chinese wax', or 'Japanese wax' to protect tsuba etc. from rust. Exuded by insects on the leaves and branches of Ibota no Ki, Ligustrum Obtusifolium. Also known as Chuhaku-ro (虫白蠟 Insect white wax, 雪蠟snow wax), イボタ蠟Ibota-ro.
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Perhaps I should add a word for Pietro too. I remember when he first appeared on the INS Netsuke scene as an eager youngster, and how he devoted himself to researching netsuke, walking the museums over the years, searching out netsuke collections and linking them electronically for people to experience, building up a vast knowledge in the interim. Still maturing! Never met him personally but generally I trust his judgment, as too that of Colin. Ron reminds me though of a grizzly Canadian frontiersman, who has seen much, bitterly forged by harsh weather, his thriving business shafted by fools in high places. What an incredible background he has had though, and what stories he has to tell, as Brian says. Needs to be heard by a glowing fire with a pinch of salt and a glass or two of whisky, all judgement suspended meantime!
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Kunitomo teppō by Kyūbei Enju, who made the stock?
Bugyotsuji replied to Peter D's topic in Tanegashima / Teppo / Hinawajū
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From a discussion on another forum re AI. ”Apparently Chat GPT and the like are liable to teach themselves to be dumb. As they work on a learning loop if they regurgitate incorrect information they also consume that information as truth and around the loop they go. This is said to be the reason why AI companies with huge efforts try to harvest old pre-AI internet and media content, that is free from copied and loop-recycled AI fantasies.”
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Some genius smiths appear in every generation to transcend the tradition. One such is Henmi Toyo (Chik-kansai Yoshitaka) from late Edo and early Meiji. Not only did he make fantastical blades but his carving was superlative, for Mei and horimono, and in other materials. https://www.google.com/search?client=safari&hs=52n&sca_esv=04a6da60a81ec2d8&hl=en-gb&udm=2&q=逸見東洋&spell=1&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwip_a3cu6GVAxWBgVYBHdGsBPcQBSgAegQICRAB&biw=390&bih=699&dpr=3
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Ron, these are simply two individuals who pop into the NMB and enjoy heated discussions. Many others are reading and learning from every post, while they suspend judgement. Some posts do have little barbs or triggers in them but the majority of participants really do try to avoid posting or getting caught on those. Colin and Pietro will challenge others, as you will challenge them, but you are all three of you quite strong characters who definitely add colour to the world! I have learned much from all of you. As to the NMB itself, it’s a little like a kaleidoscope, never the same from one year to the next.
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Going back in time. Some natural, and some adapted netsuke from over the centuries. One o’clock is a flattish Corazon seed with two holes drilled for use as a netsuke. (They were also turned into powder flasks for matchlocks.) Three and four o’clock show stones from rivers or sea shore with natural openings in them, found in antiques markets with disintegrating strings attached. At five o’clock is an old, well-used sea shell with drilled hole and string, found at Tenjin San antiques market in Kyoto. Functional netsuke. Down the middle from 12 to 6 is a root (?) with a natural channel throughout. Decorative object. At seven o’clock is an inro set hanging from a section of umoregi semi-fossilized peatbog wood. Hole was probably drilled through. This netsuke at least likely fits the Edo Period remit. Inro is wood, the sections carved to look like bamboo. To the left of the root is a wooden hook formed from a branch(?) with original piece of rice straw twine. At nine o’clock is a fishing-net weight, fired clay, cylindrical. A perfect practical netsuke for a fisherman wearing only a fundōshi loincloth. Top left is a clay object with two holes sold to me as Chinese from 700 AD(?). But we do find 2000-year-old flat oval scrapers in Japanese archaeology museums, said to have been for agriculture, with similar two-hole layout. Netsuke origins?
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Remember that a blade can be fitted with almost any tsuba, having no intrinsic relationship, so they need to be researched independently. In your case the owner may or may not have deliberately chosen a tsuba with the simple katabami mon, but that choice would most likely be independent of a Kotetsu (or otherwise) blade.
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Not sure what this is, but here’s a somewhat similar complete one I found at auction Decorative cow saddle…(?)
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https://www.google.com/search?client=safari&hs=eITV&sca_esv=e5b3c94426f10df7&hl=en-gb&q=鞍武具+骨董+鞍+江戸&uds=AJ5uw1_a2D0D09lxm8gpKKOTUn4rcgPmLRKzg4TWlqFm7k5JhzpahfW9rOkRqXXsE1CL_61Rl2hYdOpYLw3o5DpWx-gOtzmFxnlaQolSl6UDsEzzdPUNlGffd3BKhUpSJhhZXlrNVv5he1WEvWU3x_RZlaO7vMxauuOnqFayc9R0XjaKzWhXvB2PGwzrjph0GOX67EilS9MO&udm=2&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjj4pam9aCVAxXEe_UHHYuwCBsQxKsJKAR6BAgPEAE&ictx=0&biw=390&bih=699&dpr=3 Look up words like Edo, Bugu, Kura, Kotto, etc., to see some other examples for comparison.
