Utopianarian Posted August 13, 2019 Report Posted August 13, 2019 I recently acquired an old sword. The shape is intriguing. Strong sori. I don’t know what possible time period it may be from. Lots of nicks in the Ha and somebody made poor attempt to polish one side of the blade. Confused if possible muramachi, Kamakura or Shinto copy. Will post more pics later. Working a ton of shifts and need to get some sleep. Quote
Ray Singer Posted August 13, 2019 Report Posted August 13, 2019 The sword seems to have an unnatural sori. Do you have better photos we can evaluate? Quote
Utopianarian Posted August 13, 2019 Author Report Posted August 13, 2019 26.5 inch nagasa. Motohaba 2.6cm sakihaba 1.6cm sori 2.86. Kasane 0.535cm Very small Kissaki and the Hamon is present throughout the sword but very hard to capture in pics. Quote
Mark Posted August 13, 2019 Report Posted August 13, 2019 the close up of the nakago seems to show scale, maybe it has been in a fire? If so saiha is possible and would affect sori 1 Quote
Utopianarian Posted August 13, 2019 Author Report Posted August 13, 2019 I don’t know if it was fire damaged which may explain the unnatural shape and the Nakago is kind of rough to the touch and not smooth and waxy Quote
Utopianarian Posted August 13, 2019 Author Report Posted August 13, 2019 Yes lol I guess I was typing at the same time as your post Quote
Utopianarian Posted August 13, 2019 Author Report Posted August 13, 2019 The Hamon from what I can see appears unaffected but Nakago does Quote
16k Posted August 13, 2019 Report Posted August 13, 2019 I own a Shoshu den hitatsura sword that shows a lot of similarity with yours, though the sori (2.2 cm) is less important. Mine is a shortened Muromachi tachi, so I wouldn’t be surprised if yours was one too. Quote
Utopianarian Posted August 13, 2019 Author Report Posted August 13, 2019 This sword is so light and so much smaller scale than the rest of my swords. It appears to look like a thin Calvary sabre than a sword Quote
16k Posted August 13, 2019 Report Posted August 13, 2019 That is the feeling I got when I had mine in hand. It was my first Koto sword and it felt so light in comparison to a Shinto blade. Yet, it is razor sharp! 1 Quote
Utopianarian Posted August 13, 2019 Author Report Posted August 13, 2019 Yes this one is razor sharp as well which is surprising for how bad the condition it is in 1 Quote
Ray Singer Posted August 13, 2019 Report Posted August 13, 2019 Saiha is the first thing I thought when I saw your opening photo. In the additional detail pictures I can see areas of the surface flaking off the nakago. It may actually be an early sword, but is difficult to evaluate in this condition (and considering all factors including the large fukure, it would likely not be one worthwhile to restore). 1 Quote
Utopianarian Posted August 14, 2019 Author Report Posted August 14, 2019 Thank you Ray, yes I think you are right. I will just chalk this one up to lesson learned. Glad I didn’t spend much on it. It definitely fits the bill for an interesting study piece. Quote
Grey Doffin Posted August 14, 2019 Report Posted August 14, 2019 Exaggerated, unnatural curvature is one of the tells for retemper. I have seen more than a few blades that probably started life in late Koto or early shinto, that were caught in a fire, and before the retempering they were ground/polished to have a small kissaki; the subsequent strong sori along with the ko-kissaki are meant to fool the unsuspecting into thinking the sword is much earlier. My best guess is this is one of those swords. Grey 1 Quote
Utopianarian Posted August 14, 2019 Author Report Posted August 14, 2019 Thank you Grey, I am just happy I have many knowledgeable people such as you guys and a communication board to talk to others. Thank you very much for the wealth of information and knowledge that take years to acquire. I have the highest respect for you guys. Quote
Katsujinken Posted August 14, 2019 Report Posted August 14, 2019 Also note that the kissaki has been reworked, and badly. Notice how the bohi extends well beyond the “yokote”. This sword has seen a lot of abuse. Tough to say where/when its life began. I agree with Ray and Grey. Quote
PNSSHOGUN Posted August 14, 2019 Report Posted August 14, 2019 What an interesting old soldier! There's something fascinating about old swords like that have been through just about everything but the kitchen sink. 1 Quote
Utopianarian Posted August 14, 2019 Author Report Posted August 14, 2019 Yes definitely I bet the sword has some stories to tell Quote
Alex A Posted August 14, 2019 Report Posted August 14, 2019 I once found it difficult to capture a blades true sori in a pic, came across exagerated, more like a banana 2.86cm does not sound too epic curvature. Get someone to take a look at it, in hand. 1 Quote
ChrisW Posted August 14, 2019 Report Posted August 14, 2019 I agree with Alex on this one. A blade with such a long history deserves to be looked at in hand before any judgement is passed. Pictures simply don't do the vast majority of nihonto proper justice. 1 Quote
Utopianarian Posted August 14, 2019 Author Report Posted August 14, 2019 I guess it wouldn’t hurt to try. Thank you for the advice Quote
Alex A Posted August 14, 2019 Report Posted August 14, 2019 Not much left in the blade, judging by whats left at the Hamachi and the Kasane. Pity about those nicks in the edge, last thing it needs. Can you make out hada or any hamon left?, I cant tell. As mentioned, might well be an early blade, if so, what to do? Quote
Utopianarian Posted August 14, 2019 Author Report Posted August 14, 2019 I tried my best with the pics to get a good view of the Hamon. Believe it or not the nicks come close in some areas but do not go thru the Hamon. I also note the Hamon does run the entire blade even though in some pics may not appear so. Quote
Utopianarian Posted August 14, 2019 Author Report Posted August 14, 2019 It appears like there may be a lot of activity in there but not sure. I know it’s in bad shape but what do you guys think Quote
Utopianarian Posted August 14, 2019 Author Report Posted August 14, 2019 Yes prob like 50 or so which vary in severity length and depth. There are even a few on the mune Quote
Alex A Posted August 14, 2019 Report Posted August 14, 2019 I would get an opinion by someone in hand and take it from there, Maybe there is a experienced polisher out there that can give an opinion and possibly do something with it, without hitting you with too much of an hefty bill. Good luck. Quote
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