Jump to content

Opinions On Katana


SAS

Recommended Posts

And one more.... it has masame hada on the shinogi ji, the photos showing it were too high resolution to load. The jihada is hard to read, the blade was not polished well last time around. Some of the shinogi is rounded as if someone had sandpapered rust off.

post-1752-0-07559200-1446364382_thumb.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Dear Steve.

 

Hard to say very much from these images and without measurements.   What do you think of it so far?  It seems to be o suriage, rather slender with a somewhat larger kisaki.  As you can't see the boshi then we have to wonder if that is the original kisaki shape.  I have not come across mune hada being used as a kantei point and we cannot make out what the hada on the blade is from the images.  Is the shinogi raised or low?  

 

I think you will get more feedback when you give some more information, any opinion at this stage is based on pretty slim evidence, (especially mine) Having said that it would be nice to think that this was a fairly early sword.

 

Have fun.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi Steve,

 

It looks to me like there is some koshi sori going on there which would have been more pronounced before the blade was shortened - so what Uwe said.

 

Masame makes me think of Yamato or one of the related schools but I have a book on Mino to which suggests that they would often have masame in the shinogi ji. Apparently they were generally kobuse forged and this is the hada of the shingane showing - the kawagane being folded differently gives different hada in the hiraji.

 

I think this is also a kantei point for Ishido school blades but I don't think that the blade is young enough for that...

 

It looks like an interesting blade and I'm curious to hear what others have to say.

 

Best,

John

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Measurements: nagasa 26.75 inches, blade is machi okuri and (o)suriage. Motohaba 1.15 inches, sakihaba .78 inches, motokasane .27 inches, sakikasane .16 inches, shinogi high. Good comments so far, thank you :clap: PS earlier I said masame on the mune, I meant shinogi ji. PSS I hate autospell, any tips to disable it on a Mac?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

In the last picture, there is activity in the ji above the main hamon; to me this is reminiscent of the dragon chasing the moon/sun motif; thoughts? (Actually most examples of this I have seen in pictures are larger than what shows on mine, maybe just a happy coincidence.) This sword was presented as a koto sword by the last owner, who had been told that by the previous owner. Initially I had my doubts, as I thought that it could be a shinto or shinshinto utsushi of a koto blade......as I have photographed it I am thinking that it may actually be koto, though my in hand experience with old blades is limited.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Looks like it could be late kamakura from the photo's and measurements. I'd be interested on your thoughts on whether the first mekugi-ana is the original? (to me it looks like it isn't making it O-suriage and a fair bit longer originally). Also the rust on the naakago looks shinto making a shinshinto utsushi unlikely.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi Steve,

 

You could try having a play with the lighting to see if you can get any better pictures of the hamon, hada and kissaki - I can't tell a lot from those pictures other than there appears to be a hamon. You might want to point the blade towards a spot light (fluorescent if possible) and let the light play down the hamon and hada to see if you can get a picture of any activity.

 

As regards your earlier comments, I wouldn't expect to see the dragon chasing the pearl motif in the hamon of a koto blade and if it isn't significant in size it might just be nijuba that you are seeing. That wouldn't be out of keeping with koto Yamato or Yamashiro blades - another possibility would be yubashiri or shirake utsuri but it's hard to tell from the picture and we might be getting ahead of ourselves here though...when I hear hooves I try to think of horses rather than zebras.  :)

 

Best,

John

 

P.S. You could try holding the sword by the bare nakago. If it feels uncomfortable in the hand this might be where the cutting edge was originally - logically that should stop two or three inches before the mekugi ana nearest the nakago jiri. That could give a clue as to the original blade length.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

This thread is quite old. Please consider starting a new thread rather than reviving this one, unless your post is really relevant and adds to the topic..

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...