Thanks to Bruce Pennington, who identified this sword for me on another site we are members of.
An old friend of mine inherited this from her father. As I remember this sword when it was at her parent's house back in the early 1980's, it had the scabbard, but that seems to have been lost at some point between then and now.
It appears to have a stainless steel blade, and I believe is very late war manufacture as the mechanism to lock the sword in the scabbard has been deleted, which I recall reading was something that happened around 1945.
Looking at this sword, other than the missing scabbard, the main issues I see are the missing Fuchi and the way the Ito is pushed up.
Not being experienced with these swords and not wanting to make things worse, what are options on replacing the missing Fuchi, and spacing the Ito back where it should be? The little folded paper Hishigami seem to be mostly present, and I wouldn't want to lose those if possible.
Would it be better/economically feasible to have the Ito re-wrapped and tied by someone who knows what they are doing, or would that be more or less a waste of time and money on a lower end sword like this?
Is there any possibility of finding a correct scabbard? Again, with the concern of cost vs. actual value (whatever it is) of the sword?
Being a practitioner of Japanese Sanbo Zen Buddhism, the history and sword culture of Japan has always interested me, as well as my general interest in historical artifacts, militaria, and weaponry that I have had since I was a child.
My daughter and I run a small, in-home, no-kill rescue for medium and large dogs, and wolfdogs. We were recently hit with some very tragic expenses and some unexpected medical bills, so my friend, who has always been supportive of our rescue, told me to sell the sword and apply the proceeds to our rescue.
So anything I could do to reasonably and honestly preserve this sword and whatever value it has, including restoring it as closely to it's original/correct configuration if possible, desirable, or acceptable, would be a potential course of action.
Please forgive the very poor quality of the photographs, but it's the best I can do with my old and marginal little camera.