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Posted

Sanbonsugi is a hamon typically associated with Mino, however some smiths in shinshinto times experimented with a variety of different workstyles. Koyama Munetsugu for example sometimes produced sanbonsugi, though Bizen-den is his more common deki. If the sword is mumei, how did this individual determine that the sword is shinshinto Bizen? Generally with a sanbonsugi/togari-gonome hamon I would look to Mino first.

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Posted

Dear ?.

 

How have you got to 26 posts without someone telling you to add your name to each post?  That aside pictures will do a power of good with this question.  Look forward to seeing them.

 

All the best.

Posted

Geraint, because at the beginning John added it but as time passes we become lazy or we forgot... I added it so it will appear automatically

Posted

Would we call this a true sanbonsugi? Looks more like a loose choji to me, which would line up more to Bizen then would sanbonsugi. But Ray is correct that some of the shinshinto smiths practiced multiple deki, frequently having one that they’re best known for.

Posted

The photo is not exactly HD but I think I see a regular togari/gunome variant with this pattern:

 

2 peaks_3 peaks_2 peaks_3 peaks... and so on.

 

The blade looks massive and the nakago looks not too old so I would also vote for shinshinto. Here among others we have Bizen Yokoyama and varous Mino schools. For an appraisal the picture does not show enough details though.

 

Regards, Martin

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