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Bugyotsuji

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Everything posted by Bugyotsuji

  1. Justin, congratulations. My wife (used to be a bride once upon a blue moon) now understands that it guards the house. Potential burglars see this shape in the darkness... (oh, and mirrors are good too!) Plus, tell her it is an investment which cannot go wrong!
  2. Well, I enjoyed Braveheart, despite the unforgiveably clumsy muddling of 100 years of people and dates. (Arthur was a step too far, though...) In the same way, I enjoyed The Last Samurai. It's the emotion that counts, so there! (Besides, my family on my mother's side are descended from the brother of Robert The Bruce so I hate to see him vilified.) (Plus, one of my students, Shin Koyamada, played Nobutada in Last Samurai and flew around in Tom Cruise's private jet, so how could I not like the film???)
  3. As far as I know, Eric, these were called Tsuka-bukuro. There was also a Saya-bukuro for the sheath. With guns they used a Teppo-bukuro. Presumably with a spear, the Fukuro was to cover the Saya, so it could have been a Yari-no-saya-bukuro, or a Yarizaya-bukuro. This weekend I have been asking around experts and dealers to see if there might not be a Hasami-bako Sao carrying-pole somewhere. Even worm-eaten. The general opinion is, as Ian says, they are as rare as hen's teeth, (to use the gentler of the two expressions). Now if the porters gladly threw them all away or turned them into axe handles, short spears, etc., then I wonder if it might not have been an expression of freedom from the feudal era? If each one of them had one family pole handed down, then each of the people caught at the bottom of society might have been happy to trash this symbol of their slavery???
  4. You may well be right Eric. Someone has made a kanabo-looking object out of readily available material.
  5. Congratulations. It looks very good.
  6. Oops. I got all kinds of warning bells and whistles when I clicked on that... PS pics posted above.
  7. Yes, and yes. I'll post a close-up or two today. Get as close as the artist ever got! :lol:
  8. Ah, thanks!
  9. And now I have just seen your 'other' paper with "Nie nyoi shin shin to tsuku"...
  10. Sorry, had to do a bit of research、Bernard. It says for the Choukoku, "omote ura kaki-tooshi no 掻き通し
  11. My goodness, Eric, you do come up with some unusual things! Yes, I have parted with things over the years and just occasionally one thing really causes regrets. Anyway, I was meaning to post this earlier today to illustrate some of Eric's bits, but only just got around to it. I do not think it is old, per se, but quite an interesting scene. (The red seal says 箱根八里)
  12. I think the article needs editing. The word should be "Tsunomoto" (Tsuno is a horn)
  13. Having learned this morning not to be too hasty, may I hedge and just say that your translation is about 90-95% correct! :lol: PS Hokkaido is usually spelt with two 'k's because there is a little hesitation in the middle to represent the Hoku+kai-do so it sounds like Hock-Kaidou.
  14. There is a Hamano Shozui listed on p 168 of 古今金工全集 with four lines of detail. 明和 Meiwa
  15. Thank you, Moriyama san.
  16. To do this accurately would take some time, and most of us would be afraid of making a small mistake (large?) mistake somewhere. The inclination therefore, is to leave the whole job to Moriyama San or Morita San. It is a simple description saying Diasho Kawari Mokume-hada Tetsu-sabiji tsuba signed (Hamano?) Masamichi, with Niji Mei. Dated spring/summer of Showa (1970???) , it is signed by Kanzan. Edit. Some of the above is not accurate. Please see Nobody's post below!
  17. Many thanks for the understanding, the quick replies and the useful tips. Now feeling much more confident. Step one is to go home and finger it with acid sweat! :lol: Over and out!
  18. Jumping on the bandwagon for a second. Apologies to Henry. I asked a Shirogane-shi to replace a missing strip of Sekigane in a Tsuba, which he did very nicely. I expected the copper would go dull and gain patina pretty soon, but even after two years it's still shiny. Should I take it back to him?
  19. Three reactors have melted down. They and their spent fuel rod pools are causing endless problems for the struggling workers, on top of which the rains and then the unbearable heat and the typhoons are approaching. Eric, the word you have used is country slang, shyoi, which probably comes from standard Japanese verb Se-ou or 'to carry on the back', = Se-oi kago, which are still on sale! http://www.google.co.jp/search?q=%E8%83 ... 24&bih=579
  20. You mean Shimosaka? It's funny. I was just offered a Shimosaka Oomi-yari on Sunday... Just found this concerning a different Yari with a Shimosaka Mei: 銘には「下坂」とあり、筑後国柳川藩主田中吉政に仕えた刀匠「下坂八郎左衛門」のことであろうと言われています。 On this page: http://maedakeiji.jp/sub5.html
  21. Watching the footage of the earthquake and tsunami I have been surprised to see how many of such articles are still used by the old people in that area, Eric.
  22. I have heard a Kinko/Shokunin looking at a tsuba for the first time and then saying after some moments, "Neratteru tokoro wa wakaru na..." or "I can see what the maker was aiming for". In other words there must have been thousands of attempts to emulate/recreate famous tsuba, in sincerest honor/honour, many of which attempts will be extant, all slightly different, and each of varying quality.
  23. My goodness, Eric. That is redolent with hundreds of years of everyday life. You can even sense the mood of the person and the surroundiung culture in which it would have been used. Is that your room there?
  24. Ian, use of the word 'fabulous' has me eating out of your hand, but to tell the truth I think the dealer was having trouble selling it. It seems that few people collect things like this here now; a little rust and some cracking in the woodwork and it is doomed for the dump. I didn't dare take it home for fear the wife sees it, "we don't need any more clutter" (typical thinking of 99.9% of the population) so it now sits proudly (to me alone?) in my office where instead of doing office work I have been gently cleaning it up. I am really glad that you can see something in it. There was an old Professor here, a Gakugei-in who sadly passed away a couple of years ago. He had the best collection of Meiji Biidoro glass in Japan, among other wonderful things in his house. I used to watch this thin old man at antiques markets leafing through old books and unrolling scrolls, and I felt that he was somehow 'rescuing' little bits of history from some impending final disposal. He had an eye for things that no-one else seemed to possess, and many of his purchases turned out to be very valuable indeed. Thank you for your explanation which seems to be eminently sensible and sits well with what's there. I suspect there may once have been a flat lid to lock down the top tray, or it would have filled with rainwater. There may also have been a larger tomobako that this whole No-bento might have slotted into. Maybe one day at an antiques fair I will spot a square section pole to fit nicely through those carrying handles.
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