tokashikibob Posted March 23, 2014 Report Posted March 23, 2014 Gentlemen, I hope you are all enjoying a splendid weekend! Taking a break from posting/selling common antiques on the bay. I was able to pick up a set of tsuba from I believe the Edo period. One looks to have been in a museum at one time. I looked around the web and saw on Grey's site a similar piece which he stated was inlaid brass on the colorful one. Another Nihonto e-seller had the statement inlaid gold on his. Is there a way to tell for the novice without a acid test? Another question is would the proper labeling be Ko-Kinko? Shoami? I've got two Nihonto that need menuki as part of the restoration process, the recent wak-rescue blade, and this one from a few years back. http://www.militaria.co.za/nmb/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=14622 When I'm searching for a set of menuki for either blade can I pick out what I like or do I have to find a certain style or metallurgy to make it correct? In your opinion would I be able to trade either of these tsuba at a show like Chicago for a set of quality menuki(s) needed for the resto blades? Best Regards, Bob Quote
drbvac Posted March 23, 2014 Report Posted March 23, 2014 The smaller one "may be gold" wouldn't bet on the large one - the gold is a lot softer than brass if inlaid or overlaid and would tend to scratch very easily. You can even distort it by pushing with a metal object but be careful no scratching Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.