parfaitelumiere Posted April 5, 2020 Report Posted April 5, 2020 I have finally been able to purchase a kutsuwa tsuba, made from genuine horse bit. I will put a decent picture once I get it in hand, due to covid 19 there is some delay.Happy to find it, this makes another tsuba made from original item, I hope to find a real kagami tsuba one day.I combined several shots together to make this information picture.I also put together on same picture some front and back. 4 1 Quote
Pete Klein Posted April 5, 2020 Report Posted April 5, 2020 Mike Yamasaki has/had one on www.tetsugendo.com - better to find him on FaceBook though: 2 Quote
Peter Bleed Posted April 5, 2020 Report Posted April 5, 2020 I tried to find interesting Kutsuwa in the old days, but they were hard to discover. I appreciate your taste and your work! Peter Quote
parfaitelumiere Posted April 5, 2020 Author Report Posted April 5, 2020 Yeah I know about the tetsugendo Tsuba, it would just be perfect but price is far too high for me...I admit it would have been even better without hitsuana.About the kutsuwa rarity, I don't know, I found almost nothing on google, and found not so much on bing, Japanese langage search helped to find good example of decorated openwork kutsuwa, I mean, good enough to be used, very good pictures are impossible to find.Good tsuba pictures are easier to find.I know there is another thread here, with 2 different kutsuwa tsuba, not very good pictures sadly, an a last thread showing a complete kutsuwa but very small and poor quality... 1 Quote
Spartancrest Posted April 14, 2020 Report Posted April 14, 2020 Patrice L Here is something that started out not being a tsuba. I notice the nakago-ana are cut, in a counter-intuitive direction as for strength, on all the Kiri examples, I wonder why? [ is it insulting to have the blade edge pointing away from the old imperial family emblem?] The crane example would probably not work any other way. Quote
Bugyotsuji Posted April 14, 2020 Report Posted April 14, 2020 A pair of Mori Nagayoshi's Kutsuwa are on display in Oishi Jinja in Ako. The one top right above also looks like a Mori crest, Patrice. Something I found the other day. Early Edo. Not quite on topic, but in the same stable. Quote
Guest Posted April 14, 2020 Report Posted April 14, 2020 Hi Dale, Very interesting tsuba, the Go San no Kiri (3 5 3 petal) was not the Imperial Kamon. Prior to the use of the 16 petal Chrysanthemum, Go Schichi no Kiri (5 7 5 petal) was the private seal of the Imperial family. Go Schichi no Kiri is now the symbol of the Japanese Prime Minister and the Cabinet. Quote
Bugyotsuji Posted April 14, 2020 Report Posted April 14, 2020 From the Ashikaga Shogun to Toyotomi Hideyoshi, no? Quote
Spartancrest Posted April 14, 2020 Report Posted April 14, 2020 Malcom I am learning something new every day! Mon and Kamon very specialized and obviously not my field. Piers D The picture is very horse-centric, saddle frames, stirrups and mouth bits. Just 'tack' in the reins and blanket and you can 'horse' around all day! 1 Quote
parfaitelumiere Posted April 27, 2020 Author Report Posted April 27, 2020 that tsuba is very nice, dales one.I really like things made from other things. Quote
parfaitelumiere Posted April 27, 2020 Author Report Posted April 27, 2020 I just saw this one on ebay, size just under 9cm For me it's a modified kutsuwa part. Quote
parfaitelumiere Posted May 12, 2020 Author Report Posted May 12, 2020 Here is the tsuba I received today. 3 Quote
Kurikata Posted May 12, 2020 Report Posted May 12, 2020 Patrice, you probably saw this one last year in Paris ..... Quote
parfaitelumiere Posted May 12, 2020 Author Report Posted May 12, 2020 yes it's in my first message, second picture. Quote
Ray Singer Posted May 12, 2020 Report Posted May 12, 2020 Here is a Kutsuwa I shared here on the board earlier. http://www.militaria.co.za/nmb/topic/29361-large-kutsuwa-horsebit-tsuba-88mm-x-94mm/ Quote
parfaitelumiere Posted May 13, 2020 Author Report Posted May 13, 2020 first picture, on the middle. Quote
Kurikata Posted June 29, 2020 Report Posted June 29, 2020 Another one sold in Paris in June 2012. Please note the hammer price : 3800 € !!!! Quote
parfaitelumiere Posted July 21, 2020 Author Report Posted July 21, 2020 Interesting, as the supposed period in added in description. Quote
Spartancrest Posted July 23, 2020 Report Posted July 23, 2020 There must be some reason why the designs all have the nakago-ana oriented the same way- the structurally weakest. For a combat weapon this makes no sense. Bruno P. s picture is an extreme example, there is not a lot of metal left to support the back edge of the blade. 1 Quote
parfaitelumiere Posted July 23, 2020 Author Report Posted July 23, 2020 the reason is when you wear the sword the mon is on the right side, not reversed.In all case the kutsuwa is terrible for combat, large, with holes to break your fingers, weak, all are defects, but there was fashion and trends in antique Japanese times. 3 Quote
Ken-Hawaii Posted July 24, 2020 Report Posted July 24, 2020 Most of these tsuba were created during the Tokugawa shogunate, when there weren't any major battles. That's why tsuba & swords became more ornate, to catch the attention of Samurai. Otherwise, the tosho would be out of business. 2 Quote
Spartancrest Posted March 18, 2021 Report Posted March 18, 2021 For all those still interested in kutsuwa tsuba you may wish to see one going for auction https://www.jauce.com/auction/l663585368 The wisteria mitsu tomoe sukashi doesn't leave a lot of metal around the nakago-ana. The central area looks similar to a guard from the Ashmolean Museum. http://jameelcentre.ashmolean.org/object/EAX.10192 Quote
Kurikata Posted August 8, 2021 Report Posted August 8, 2021 Hi, one horse bit tsuba will be sold in Switzerland by Galerie Moenius next September 25: https://www.drouotonline.com/l/15786407-tsuba-japon-fer-16e-s-9-x-85-c?actionParam=listLot&controllerParam=lot&fromId=117518 Quote
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