ok, i bought this Wak about a month back, and it's blade was in... well, pretty horrid shape. it wasn't rusted, but it looks to me like someone took it to a grinding wheel in an attempt to sharpen it. it actually pained my physically to look at it, but still... $200 wasn't something i would pass up.
i'm providing two pictures, though one is only a negative so that you can see the extent of the damage.
this is the worst of the damage, but the marks continued the entire length of the blade, all the way to the tip. it pained me mostly because it was done, obviously, right up the Hamon. i can only assume whoever had this thought that the Hamon was some sort of... i don't know, rust? my mind can't actually come up with what would make someone do this.
after talking to a friend of mine who used to do Kendo, he put me in touch with a friend of his. his friend happens to have been in the field of sharpening Nihonto before he came to America decades ago, and even does a bit of work here and there. he said that he was willing to at least attempt to remove the damage, though not polish it for $200 American. he wasn't sure if the Hamon could be salvaged, but he would give it a shot. so, i took it to him today, and he said he'll get around to it in a few weeks (he's retired, lazy, and has a few people who he's been doing doing business with for years ahead of me.) i've seen some of his work, and it's really good, but like he said it's not going to be a polish.
so, tell someone who's new to the whole Nihonto world... do you think there's hope for it?
James C.