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Posted

Think I would give every sword and piece of fittings that I own to acquire that one. But don't think I would even come close.

Wow...sword of a lifetime. Think my hands would shake every time I took it out of the shirasaya.

Posted

Mmh, different opinion on that Brian.

Even at the DTI-  as a non-Japanese: you're Japanese better be very good or you have to be someone known to get to see and handle these.

 

Don't get me wrong:  some are quite open and even a little polite Japanese language goes a long way.

Just.... much much better to be Darcy when trying to get access to this level of blade. 

Posted

At DTI:    Juyos are a dime a dozen and yes, most will let you handle them no problem. A few are Xenophobic.

 

It quickly falls away at the Toku Juyo level. Those, you look at under glass unless you are with someone known and they OK you.

When you get into the vault level Toku Juyo and beyond, then you better have a proven track record of knowledge, appreciation, commitment, and conviction (to be a buyer).

  • Like 2
Posted

I think you guys are making stuff up: "Prove your intention"? "Vault level Tokuju"? "Proven track record"?

 

You know what it is? The smell of money. Dealers of any high end commodity (particularly artwork) can smell from a mile away whether your wallet is packed full of money, or not. I would be willing to bet that if you walked confidently into any shop in Tokyo with the determination to procure a high end sword, then you would be welcomed to view anything they had for sale. Granted there might be some old guys who would rather see a foreigner get lost, but I suspect they are few these days.

 

It's like when someone walks into a Porsche or Mercedes dealership out of curiosity. They know if your just dreaming. Your approach, your posture, and somewhat apologetic demeanour. "I just wanted to have a look." 

 

I worked in a motorcycle dealership, before I got my post-secondary education. They used to call the undecided time-wasters "nose-pickers".

 

But you guys are right about the intention and conviction part. 

 

I pick my nose a lot too.

 

But then there is a corollary to that: Sometimes a well intentioned prospective buyer presents himself in dirty jeans and torn t-shirt, and is dismissed as a bum.   The dealer never realizes any better, and loses prospective client. Respect for custom is another issue altogether.

 

Pietro

Posted

I admit I am a little bemused by this. As Curran says, or sort of says, there a numerous Juyo papered blades at the DTI. And my own limited experience has been that the vast majority of dealers were more than happy to let me look at them in detail (maybe the grey hair makes me look more of a spender than I am!)

The lack of swords with higher papers on display did not lessen my experience. If dealers choose to be careful regarding who they show these works to can you really blame them? I have witnessed shows that are crowded with people, you have no idea the level of understanding and you just have to watch some of them pick up swords to know they are a liability and risk to both sword and anyone else standing around. While those at the DTI may be more knowledgeable I am sure there is a wide range on understanding and the non Japanese are by no means the bottom of the food chain there. If dealers with swords worth several hundred dollars are careful Isn't it reasonable that those with blades with a huge price tag should be equally cautious?

I think they are just trying to protect their investment. I think in those circumstances I would probably do the same.

From my point of view I was envious enough looking at the Juyo level blades I couldn't afford to buy. If I had seen a lot of even better swords I would have probably left in an even more depressed state!

Posted

I hope no one was offended by my post.

 

No, Jamie, I have not attended a DTI. I am relatively new to collecting, and I have not had the time to attend one of these shows. I do not doubt that some dealers may be selective about what they show to prospective customers, based upon hierarchy.

 

Curran said, "I think they are just trying to protect their investment." That is entirely understandable. If a gaijin on holiday walks into a fine shop in Tokyo hoping to just have an ogle at one of their best swords, why should they produce it? Unless they get the sense that he's truly looking to buy. Every time you unsheathe or sheathe a sword, you risk producing fine scratches and burnishing marks. Not to mention that if the customer is not careful, the sword may be marred. I think that if your intention is to buy, and you have the money, then why wouldn't they show the best items to you? If you are just "looking", then forget it.

 

Pietro

Posted

When it comes to shops in Tokyo or Kyoto; they scare the hell out of me. Narrow aisles, precarious perches, that niggling feeling to purchase something to justify the owners time, afraid to look at things I can't afford in 10 lifetimes, my normal social awkwardness, a love hate thing. I could spend days in some shops just ogling, but, don't like the pressure sometimes, of my own making. John 

  • Like 1
Posted

Curran said, "I think they are just trying to protect their investment."

 

Pietro

 

Did I? Where?

I know I am getting a little senile.

 

I totally understand Pietro's opinion, as I came into this hobby and there were (and still are a few) guys who claimed they were the keys to the Gates of Heaven of Japan because of their connections.

Two decades later, the truth is somewhere in the middle. One or two really could open doors, though many were blowhards.

 

Pietro said, "I would be willing to bet that if you walked confidently into any shop in Tokyo with the determination to procure a high end sword, then you would be welcomed to view anything they had for sale."

Ah... No. _Mostly true... but not true. True of places like Ginza Choshuya, but not true for others. I can think of at least two places that won't really open to you just on the basis of money.

Reasons vary.

 

I'll add/edit this more later, as am dead tired. I understand Pietro's opinion and largely agreed with it at one point.

Now, I disagree with it.

  • Like 1
Posted

I think Pietro meant to say Paul not Curran about protecting their investment. I havnt been to Japan YET but I think its good if top end sword dealers are a little more protective of the most important swords as I would hate to hear about a top blade being ruined because a rich guy had the cash to buy it but doesnt have the appreciation or respect for nihonto to preserve and handle it properly. Im planning a trip to Japan in the near future and im sure I will have the same feeling of pressure while wanting to ogle all day in certain sword shops but I dont want to regret not asking or looking at something special because of that niggling feeling to buy to justify the dealers time but Im sure I will.

 

All the best.

 

Greg

Posted

Yeh, I did mean Paul (not Curran) regarding the protecting investment statement.

 

Okay. Here is the challenge, Curran. Everyone on this board contributes a bit towards a ridiculously large pool of money. You provide us with the names of those two shops in Japan who are holding back, just because they don't really value money all that much. They would much prefer that their best swords find a nice Japanese "forever home". Sorry, that's an irritating term that the doggy breeders use frequently. 

 

I'll take the pile of cash to Japan with me (flying first class, of course), and walk into both of these shops. I'll slap the great wad of cash down on the counter and say, "show me your best sword". When I get home, after I have spent any remaining dollars on Sake and escorts, we'll submit the sword to an impartial expert and see what he says. The sword will then be sold for a net loss on eBay, and every member will receive a small portion of his original contribution back as a token of gratitude.

 

Pietro

  • Like 1
Posted

You provide us with the names of those two shops in Japan who are holding back, just because they don't really value money all that much.

 

Not only Curran, but quite a few others could give you at least two names - one in Tōkyō, one in Ōsaka are the most prominent - of sword dealers who will be completely unimpressed by your money. If you amend your proposal/challenge, i.e. paying back the participants in full plus interest if you are not able to buy their most expensive sword, I'm in.

  • Like 3
Posted

Just have to laugh to myself a little. Not at anyone's expense. But having been there just a little, the first thing that strikes you about Japan, is how UN-Western their thinking and actions are. Things that we expect just don't cross their minds. Like the type of commercialism that was mentioned above.
Yes, they want to make money. But sometimes history and art and tradition and other factors just overshadow what we would expect, to the point that most of us would never even see the top stuff, never mind be offered it for sale. You don't just wave around money and have them thrust swords at you.

Guido and Reinhard and Darcy would be able to tell you more. The top stuff isn't available open in public. Don't use Western commercial expectations when considering the market there. It just doesn't work that way. The high end dealers don't sell to put food on the table. They sell to clients who they think deserve the opportunity to purchase, and who will pass them on to suitable owners later.
I am sure that at any one time, more than one Masamune is for sale. And all the other top makers. But you won't see those swords on a shelf at the DTI. Wave around lots of cash, and I expect your chances at those will be even less. It is hard to explain. You have to go there to understand it.

  • Like 5
Posted

Something that hasn't been mentioned so far, but goes along the lines of #s 1 & 10 in Darcy's post: some dealers will show you their most important (and expensive) swords even if they know you're not in the market of buying them. Just because they know that your heart is into a certain smith/school, and they like how determined you are in your studies. And maybe because they like you.

 

When I started studying and collecting Sōshū and Sō-den swords, I made the rounds of Tōkyō dealers. In one shop I had visited before on several occasions, I asked to look at a jūyō den-Tametsugu. The shop owner showed it to me, although he probably knew that I would have a hard time coughing up the dough for that sword. He then said "it's a nice sword, but I have one that might be more interesting." He went to his back office, and returned with a jūyō-bunkazai Norishige. "You know that it has to stay in Japan even if you buy it, right?" he asked with a wink. We both had a good laugh, and I think he enjoyed me drooling over that sword as much as I enjoyed studying it.

 

No, it certainly isn't all about money.

 

  • Like 7
Posted

Not only Curran, but quite a few others could give you at least two names - one in Tōkyō, one in Ōsaka are the most prominent - of sword dealers who will be completely unimpressed by your money. If you amend your proposal/challenge, i.e. paying back the participants in full plus interest if you are not able to buy their most expensive sword, I'm in.

 

Guido:  I was thinking of one in Tokyo and the other I believe is near Osaka. Probably I could add a third in Tokyo, though the son is a bit more open than the father.

 

As usual, Darcy's points are spot on. Painfully so, and I wish I could say I'd never broken any of them. Lessons learned by me, and I have tried to be patient with others as they evolve too.

---> Darcy has been patient with a lot of us nimrods over the years. It is fun to watch him operate at the DTI, but he is quite busy while most of us are more on the tourist side of things.

 

As per Guido's story with the bunkazai Norishige:   yes, many of us know our level.

It has been great when a few collectors and dealers have let me be part of something much beyond what I could afford or otherwise access. They know it, and I know it: yet they still share.

Also, in two instances in Japan, it has only been through a friend [both members here on NMB] that I've been able to see and handle items otherwise just known of in books. When the guest of someone else and their relationship, extra extra careful to be polite and thankful to the host yet due respect and place to the primary relationship between the host and the person he invited.

Posted

....As per Guido's story with the bunkazai Norishige:   yes, many of us know our level.

Curran I hope that the level keeps on changing as one studies and learns more. I think that one needs to set a goal an learn/save towards that goal. Once that goal is mt set another and then another. It worked for me. The work continues, the learning continues and the opportunities present themselves. Each goal must be attainable in a reasonable period of time. I'm sure that most of the senior members of this board have done just that. 

  • Like 1
Posted

Dear Pietro,

 

No offense intended, but perhaps an analogy would help you understand.  What if two guys wanted to marry your daughter...  One is rich and throws a lot of money around but doesn't appear to know much about relationships.  The other is not rich, but he's sincere and is obviously trying to have a great relationship with her.  Who do you want to marry your daughter?  My swords are like my daughters (you'll need to learn a lot more about relationships before I ever let you near one of them...)

  • Like 1
Posted

Btw, there's a strange twist to my story: some time later I was asked to smuggle the Norishige out of Japan through certain channels I have access to. Needless to say that I refused. A few months later the dealer - who always had a booth at the DTI, and is known to many who have been there - kind of disappeared. I heard rumors that he owed a lot of people a lot of money, that he had problems with the tax authorities, that he was arrested, that he went into hiding.

 

But enough story telling, let's set up that fund raiser for Pietro. :rotfl:

  • Like 1
Posted

P.S.: I just realized that I'm able to share this anecdote (and there are many more) simply because … I'm getting old! Where's that young feller who strolled with all the confidence in the world into Iida Kōendō 35 years ago, although he wasn't able to tell the difference between a katana and a crowbar? I guess what I want to say is that we (including, and first and foremost, myself) shouldn't be too hard on newbies who are just starting, and still have lots of misconceptions and romantic ideas. However, collecting crowbars can be very rewarding, too!  ;-)

  • Like 1
Posted

Yep, it was intended to be a silly joke. Selling a Tokuju sword on eBay for a net loss? I thought it was funny.

 

What got me going were the simple comments made by Pete and Curran earlier on in this thread.

 

Pete said: Yup, money alone doesn't do it. Yah gotta prove your intention.

Well, sure. But to prove your intention, you have to have some money in your pocket. That is my contention.

 

Curran said (somewhat reflexively): When you get into the vault level Toku Juyo and beyond, then you better have a proven track record of knowledge, appreciation, commitment, and conviction (to be a buyer).

 

A rather generic reply, perhaps not borne out of a genuine experience, I thought. Again, commitment and conviction relies entirely upon having the money to spend. 

 

Tanto 54 (George): The sword-daughter analogy is ridiculous. If I had any daughters, I certainly would not prize even the rarest sword as greatly. Once you have sold a previously loved sword, does it really matter what happens to it? Unless you are hoping to buy it back in the future. You can't protect everything, and the cold sword does not have a soul (some may want to disagree). Daughters and sons do have souls, and carry your genes.

 

Guido: I love your sense of humour. I have two old Japanese crowbars. Both of them are Juyo Token chunks of well hammered steel. 

 

Quick! Someone note down what he said about not being "too hard on newbies who are just starting", before he has a change of heart and edits his post.

 

Pietro

  • Like 1

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