Konstantin Posted October 15, 2006 Report Posted October 15, 2006 Hi in the Forum i am a Novice in Nihonto but i have a Sword and i dont now is this a good Katana? I dont understand and read Japanese can you help me? Sorry for my bad English Quote
Bungo Posted October 15, 2006 Report Posted October 15, 2006 well it's not a Bungo................ It's NBTHK papered to Mihara. Milt THE ronin Quote
Konstantin Posted October 15, 2006 Author Report Posted October 15, 2006 Sir, which is the differentiated from Mihara to Bungo? I search the I-net and i found Bingo Mihara is this the same? Quote
uwe Posted October 15, 2006 Report Posted October 15, 2006 Hi Konstantin, NBTHK papered blade and koshirae as well. Hmmm....looks like a good sword to me. BTW: Bingo is the province and Mihara the school. So your sword is Yamato Tradition. Uwe Quote
Bungo Posted October 15, 2006 Report Posted October 15, 2006 Sir, which is the differentiated from Mihara to Bungo?I search the I-net and i found Bingo Mihara is this the same? a " letter " makes a lot of difference. Bingo is not the same as Bungo, just like Iraq is not the same as Iran. Milt THE ronin[/u] Quote
DavidF Posted October 16, 2006 Report Posted October 16, 2006 Depends... How much are you paying for it? What does the blade look like? If (after it was papered) some teenager decided to "polish" it with a bench grinder, it could be a poor katana. If it is in full polish and good condition, it could be very good katana. BTW, bungo means "reject". Pay no attention to Milt's sense of humor. DaveF. Quote
Bungo Posted October 16, 2006 Report Posted October 16, 2006 BTW, bungo means "reject". Pay no attention to Milt's sense of humor. DaveF. not exactly.............on a serious note, there's nothing wrong with being " bungo ". I just don't like the way the shinsa pigeon holed swords they don't want to " stick their necks out for " to Bungo . It used to be Echizen seki, every mumei swords were papered to that. Milt THE ronin Quote
David Flynn Posted October 16, 2006 Report Posted October 16, 2006 Milt, just to share things around, I believe they paper some to Kaga Quote
Konstantin Posted October 16, 2006 Author Report Posted October 16, 2006 Hi, here some pictures of the Blade it was verry Varry difficult to make good Fotos. To DaveF.: I payed for two Katana and two Wakizashi and one Tanto 8500 Euro. The other Katana is without paper only Shirasaya, one Wakizashi with Papers maybe Nthk in Shirasaya, the other without Papers in Koshirae and the Tanto without Papers in Shirasaya. I hope it was a good Deal for me. Another Question: I found (I-Net) a Ko, Chu and Sue Mihara School, witch school is my Sword and what say the Papers from the Koshirae? Thank you for the answer`s Konstantin Quote
Stephen Posted October 16, 2006 Report Posted October 16, 2006 i dont think got a bad deal at all ...unless the other four are really bad ....which i doubt ...id say you did quite well. Quote
Brian Posted October 16, 2006 Report Posted October 16, 2006 Just curious as to how you purchased 5 Nihonto without knowing exactly what they were or what the papers say? Not a criticism..just curious. Was it a spur of the moment bulk deal from a collector or estate..or was it a long term planned purchase? Just seems odd to spend that amount without knowing even the school of the blades? Looks to me like you got a very good deal though. This blade looks in great polish, and with papered fittings. I hope the others are as nice. Are these your first Nihonto or are you already a collector? Dealer maybe? We will have to wait for someone to translate the origami properly to be able to tell more. Brian Quote
Megumu hisashi Posted October 16, 2006 Report Posted October 16, 2006 Dear Konstantin, can you tell us, where you bought your swords? Regards, Quote
Konstantin Posted October 16, 2006 Author Report Posted October 16, 2006 Hi Brian, i am not a colector or Dealer, the history is follow: I am a interior decorator and i work for a Lady in there House in Summer. In one room she has a lot of old stuff and Antiques from her Husband ( he is died ) maybe he was a collektor of Swords, Knifes, and weppons and i saw this items and pleased me. As i endet the Work, the Son of the Lady offered me to pay a part of my work with the swords, and i say why not. My feeling was i have make a good deal. Konstantin Quote
Martin Posted October 16, 2006 Report Posted October 16, 2006 Hi Konstantin, this sounds like a cool job... And cool for the swords as they now found a new owner, who hopefully give them a good home Any pictures or information of the other blades? cheers, Martin Quote
Konstantin Posted October 16, 2006 Author Report Posted October 16, 2006 Here the second Wakizashi in Shirsaya with white Papers. I search today to find more Information about Mihara but it was very difficult Bingo-Mihara, Tomo-Mihara, Ashira-Mihara, Kai-Mihara and and and..... Quote
Konstantin Posted October 16, 2006 Author Report Posted October 16, 2006 Here the Tanto in Shirasaya. Quote
Bungo Posted October 16, 2006 Report Posted October 16, 2006 I think you've done VERY WELL...................... not to " nag ", but no fingers on the blades unless you want to leave your fingerprint there as mark of ownership. Milt THE ronin Quote
Nobody Posted October 17, 2006 Report Posted October 17, 2006 Hi in the Forum i am a Novice in Nihonto but i have a Sword and i dont now is this a good Katana? I dont understand and read Japanese can you help me? They are Kanteisho issued by NBTHK. Most of the descriptions are fixed pattern and you can understand 80-90 % of them by referring the following Dr. Richard Stein's web site. http://home.earthlink.net/~steinrl/origami.htm The Kanteisho on the left is for the blade. The specific description says that Katana, unsigned ((attributed to) Mihara), length ni shaku ku bu han (about 63.5 cm). The Kanteisho certifies the katana as a Hozon Token and was issued on Apr. 3rd, 2006. The rignt Kanteisho is for Koshirae. The Koshirae was certified as a Hozon Tosogu on Feb. 16th, 2006. The Koshirae was described as Kuro Isokusanuri saya Uchigatana Koshirae(黒磯草塗鞘打刀拵). That means a Koshirae for a Uchigatana with black lacqurer work of seaweed pattern. Other descriptions are details of F/K, Menuki, and Tsuba. Quote
Ludolf Richter Posted October 17, 2006 Report Posted October 17, 2006 Hi Konstantin, I have some doubt about Your story with the "old stuff" but new papers from 2006!Ludolf Quote
Konstantin Posted October 17, 2006 Author Report Posted October 17, 2006 Sir Mr. Richter, the story exaktly and truth, there is no reason to tell here in the Forum a lying history. Which I can do for it how the papers are from 2006, i call today the Lady for explain ! I do not speak well English and the most of the answers i tranclate on google but i am not a storyteller i am a Greek man! Regards Quote
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