david kracek Posted June 29, 2020 Report Posted June 29, 2020 Hello I don't know if I'm writing to a good discussion, I'm new here I'd like to ask if anyone knows this signature. Thank you goodbye. 1 Quote
Bugyotsuji Posted June 30, 2020 Report Posted June 30, 2020 Ken, I usually simply unplug my PC and turn it upside down. 2 Quote
david kracek Posted June 30, 2020 Author Report Posted June 30, 2020 turned, thank you, hopefully it can be deciphered Quote
Bugyotsuji Posted June 30, 2020 Report Posted June 30, 2020 Because of the difficulty with Kanji orientation here, I am thinking that it might not be a signature and wondering if the tsuba maker might not have used the original Mei he found inside the Kabuto? I think we can at least see the old character for Kuni\Koku 国, i.e. 國 perhaps, no? For example, just to get the ball rolling, does anyone see 拍國 for example? 1 Quote
david kracek Posted June 30, 2020 Author Report Posted June 30, 2020 thank you very much for your opinion, do you think it was common to remake a helmet for a tsuba? Regards David Quote
Geraint Posted June 30, 2020 Report Posted June 30, 2020 Dear David. Certainly not common, there are numerous tsuba which are made in imitation of kabuto plates but this is the first I have ever seen of this form. A nice thing to own. All the best. Quote
david kracek Posted July 1, 2020 Author Report Posted July 1, 2020 thank you very much for your opinion, do you think it was common to remake a helmet for a tsuba? Regards David Quote
IanB Posted July 1, 2020 Report Posted July 1, 2020 David, Remember that iron, even scraps, were valuable and if you could make a tsuba out of bits lying around, it uses them up. Piers, I agree with what you see but I also see shu 州 above. That would make sense if indeed the iron has been recycled from an old helmet. If the character above kuni 国 is indeed 拍 Hyo, Haku utsu it doesn't seem to make sense. However, it appears to be a pseudonym for 打 cho, da. Ian Bottomley Quote
Bugyotsuji Posted July 1, 2020 Report Posted July 1, 2020 Ian, I agree it doesn't make much sense, and thanks for the extra thoughts. Do you think it is a place name rather than an individual Kabuto maker's Mei? Assuming that a Mei moves down away from the tehen, then are you suggesting that the original photo orientation was correct, and it somehow says 'struck/hammered in X country'? Quote
david kracek Posted July 1, 2020 Author Report Posted July 1, 2020 thank you all. I am not able to date tsuba I thought the signature would suggest, my estimate is 1550 to 1700 is it real? David Quote
IanB Posted July 1, 2020 Report Posted July 1, 2020 Piers, The only armour makers (as far as I know) who didn't use the top - down arrangement were the Bamen who signed horizontally just above the koshimaki. I tend to agree that the mei once adorned a helmet that was broken up and the bits used to make the tsuba. The fact that each plate retains a suji suggests this as does the hole above the cho kanji that woulf have been for the agemaki no kan on the backplate. Ian Bottomley. Quote
Bugyotsuji Posted July 1, 2020 Report Posted July 1, 2020 It’s just a load of junk, David. I’ll send you my address so that you can get rid of it. Seriously for a second. If this was put together from an old Kabuto I do not see why the original hachi would not be as old as you suggest. I like the idea of the snowflake design of the folded tehen rim covering. As to when this was made into a tsuba I have no idea, but the sekigané suggests that it does have some genuine usage and age to it. An unusual object! 1 Quote
Bugyotsuji Posted July 3, 2020 Report Posted July 3, 2020 PS Where I considered 'Yuki', snowflake Mon above, it does look like it could be Ginkgo leaf design. Quote
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