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Posted

Far from simple...quite stunning.
When uploading from phones...edit and save the pic, stops it rotating due to a common cellphone/internet bug.
Trying to decide why the shape of the ana. But that is a lovely tsuba.

Posted

I personnaly like these tsuba with poems or dedicated incantation. Very nice piece as Brian mentioned. If someone can give a translation , it would bring a part of the clues.

Posted

Suishin Masahide (kao)

Roku juu ni ou-Sixty-two year old man

Bunka Hachi Kanoto Hitsuji Nigatsu Hi-

Bunka Eight Younger Ram February Day

(1811)

 

 

It is the last line of a quatrain by Wang Wei, poet of the Tang Dynasty.

It is very difficult to translate into English but it basically says "even though he dies, his chivalry lives forever."

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Posted

Indeed, this is a wonderful tsuba. I am impressed that it probably was made with sekigane. And look, too, at how the wall is thickened ever so slightly below the flange at the margin itself. I wonder how he did that.

Peter

Posted

.....And look, too, at how the wall is thickened ever so slightly below the flange at the margin itself. I wonder how he did that....

Peter, with a small hammer and without heat.

 

By the way, I cannot see TOSHO style elements in this TSUBA.

Posted

Peter, with a small hammer and without heat.

Jean. I think you are right. Certainly there was no heat. The final work must have involved very skillful use of a small hammer. For the deeper thickening, tho, I wonder if a larger hammer may have been used for the first coupe of rounds.  A bigger hammer would make a deeper impact,especially if the iron was very soft. Some experimentation might be useful. Hmmm.

All this to say, thanks for an interesting insight.

Peter

Posted

David,

your TSUBA is simple and very nice, and it is probably made by a swordsmith, but I would hesitate to call it TOSHO. Compared with other TSUBA which we tend to put into the TOSHO frame, it is a different style.

No criticism from my side intended.

Posted

Last time I checked tosho is swordsmith tsuba. If the tsuba is signed by a swordsmith style or design has no bearing in determining tosho or not. If you are not aware that Masahide was a swordsmith I got it.

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..

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