Logan09 Posted June 21, 2019 Report Posted June 21, 2019 Or is it just me. Seriously though, has anyone seen anything like this before? I didn't weigh the blade but it must've weighed no more than 8oz(19.5" overall blade) those aren't even the thinner spots on the blade, some measured as low as 1mm near the kissaki. Quote
SAS Posted June 21, 2019 Report Posted June 21, 2019 It looks to have been polished down quite a bit; whether it is tired, depends on how old it is and what the rest looks like (kind of like people) 1 Quote
Logan09 Posted June 21, 2019 Author Report Posted June 21, 2019 The blade was Bent, had a few Ware and looked like the hamon ran off near the kissaki. But was in bad polish and really hard to tell. I do not have the blade anymore. Was Shobu-Zukuri but mumei. Quote
ggil Posted June 22, 2019 Report Posted June 22, 2019 From the caliper photo, It’s sort of diamond shaped and it looks like you are measuring the mune not the kasane. If it’s really >6mm under the habaki and <2mm near the kissaki (near where the ideal point of impact is), then yeah a lottle tired. Quote
Logan09 Posted June 22, 2019 Author Report Posted June 22, 2019 The Caliper is actually a little above the shinogi-ji. Here was the habaki fitment. Quote
ggil Posted June 22, 2019 Report Posted June 22, 2019 Whoa! amazing a polisher took it that far down. Steve has a point in that it could be a reference for a smith that forged a single piece (Maru construction) but blades polished down this much should be reTIRED, or given the restful peace they deserve. I wouldn’t trust it to swing, not that I’d trust myself to swing nihonto at anything anyway. Quote
Logan09 Posted June 22, 2019 Author Report Posted June 22, 2019 I myself thought why a togishi would polish this blade down this far. We/I will probably never know. I just thought I'd share as I have never seen this before. I wouldn't be surprised if the bend that was in the blade was caused by a gust of wind. Considering how thin it was. 1 Quote
PNSSHOGUN Posted June 22, 2019 Report Posted June 22, 2019 The shape could've also originally been Unokubi Zukuri. Regardless, quite remarkable, I would have kept purely as a curio/joke piece. Quote
16k Posted June 22, 2019 Report Posted June 22, 2019 Maybe that blade suffered from anorexia? :lol Quote
Alex A Posted June 22, 2019 Report Posted June 22, 2019 Yes, compare the thickness at the Hamachi to a little further down the blade. Quote
SAS Posted June 22, 2019 Report Posted June 22, 2019 The Japanese have a saying, better to wear out than rust away, or something like that. Quote
Tom Darling Posted June 22, 2019 Report Posted June 22, 2019 Logan, can you show us both sides of the nakago, and does it have a hamon? Thank you. Tom D. Quote
Stephen Posted June 22, 2019 Report Posted June 22, 2019 The Japanese have a saying, better to wear out than rust away, or something like that. Steve i think that was Neil Young...lol 2 Quote
nagamaki - Franco Posted June 23, 2019 Report Posted June 23, 2019 Hmm, 13 posts and 12 replies later and the question still hasn't been answered. Quote
Brian Posted June 24, 2019 Report Posted June 24, 2019 Question? There's a question?Where?I take it more as a "look how polished down this blade is"Surely there can't be a real question of "Is this blade tired?" as there is no strict definition of when a blade is tired, and it is a general condition where a sword is worn out. There can be no absolute statement of how much shingane must show for it to be tired. If it looks past it...it's tired. There is no formula and no absolute answer.So I ask you, what is the question? 1 Quote
Brian Posted June 24, 2019 Report Posted June 24, 2019 If you want a question...Let's assume a Koto tanto without core steel. Made of one steel, no shingane. When is it consdered tired? If polished down to the point that it is flexible...is it tired or just worn out? Or still just an overpolished tanto? 2 Quote
Tom Darling Posted June 25, 2019 Report Posted June 25, 2019 The unknown raises more interest than it deserves. Tom D. Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.