barnejp Posted January 12, 2017 Report Posted January 12, 2017 Hello Everyone, Since, I've moved away from anything other than Edo era blades/swords, I'm a bit at a lose here. I've been contacted by someone who is looking to sell their collection of samurai blades/swords. Below is an example; Selling Katana with bohi in koshirae. Signed: "Kunimune." Fine kodogu, signed tsuba. 1250-1300 In decent polish, guaranteed against hagire. Nagasa: 67.4 cm. Sori: 1.5 cm. Moto-haba: 2.8 cm. Saki-haba: 1.7 cm. Moto-gasane: 0.6 cm. Saki-gasane: 0.3 cm. Photos attached BTW, this sword looks familiar?? Thank you, Greg Quote
Greg F Posted January 12, 2017 Report Posted January 12, 2017 Hi Greg, not sure what your asking. The sword looks ok, not sure about the signiture. All the best. Greg Quote
CSM101 Posted January 12, 2017 Report Posted January 12, 2017 Hi Greg, Bizen Saburo Kunimune: No. Uwe G. Quote
paulb Posted January 12, 2017 Report Posted January 12, 2017 There wre a lot of Bizen smiths signing Kunimune. Look at the Kuni character it is unusual and looks more like the style used by Enju and Rai smiths than the famous Bizen Kunimune (I don't have access to references at present so I doing this from memory. I don't think it I identical but it has some common features) Not sure if the 1250-1300 is the suspected date, if so I think it is being a little optimistic. It has the look of something a little later i.e. 1400-1500. Having said that it looks to be a good blade. Whether it is worth buying depends on the price Style of photography does look familliar so it may well have appeared before but I dont remember when Quote
Stefan Posted January 12, 2017 Report Posted January 12, 2017 Nice blade. The signature is gimei in my opinion. The rust does not look natural. I think the kanji were added at a later date. Greetings Stefan Quote
Ken-Hawaii Posted January 12, 2017 Report Posted January 12, 2017 My guess is that the 1250-1300 may be a price range, rather than a date...or it darn well should be! Yes, gimei, & the shape is all wrong for an early-Kamakura blade. Ken Quote
ROKUJURO Posted January 12, 2017 Report Posted January 12, 2017 Greg,looking at the MEI, it is not a KATANA but a TACHI. Quote
Brian Posted January 12, 2017 Report Posted January 12, 2017 Whoever is selling them looks to be using the description and pics of the person/dealer he bought them from. eBay seller in this case? One of the Japanese guys? Quote
JonnyO Posted January 12, 2017 Report Posted January 12, 2017 Nice blade. The signature is gimei in my opinion. The rust does not look natural. I think the kanji were added at a later date. Greetings Stefan First thing I thought, too, when seeing the signature. ( my opinion is just that Quote
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