DAY Posted March 25, 2022 Report Posted March 25, 2022 This one caught my eye on e**y back in February... It is 83 x 85 mm; 5mm thick at both rim and seppa dai ; rounded rim and chisel cut, tekkotsu not visible. The loop that has lost its patina sits above the main plate 1 mm. Any ideas on time period or school for this piece ? Now that I have "accumulated" a few pieces it is time to figure out what I have. Possibly Later Edo Ko-shaomi ? If you have seen the original listing the white crud in the corners was old dried wax.. Thank in advance for any information you may be able to provide. David sorry second image is upside down.. 2 Quote
kissakai Posted March 25, 2022 Report Posted March 25, 2022 Assuming it is not a copy them possibly Heinjo circa 1750 It is a curtain and rails Quote
DAY Posted March 25, 2022 Author Report Posted March 25, 2022 Thanks Grev, I'm trying to get the upside down photo corrected with better lighting so the color is a bit closer to the actual tone. I can't begin to fathom the time and dedication hunched over a work bench to produce a detailed piece like this. Kudos to those who continue this line of work. Every time it goes under the scope I see more detail that I missed before . Thanks again for the info I'll look into this David Quote
kissakai Posted March 25, 2022 Report Posted March 25, 2022 It is nice The one in the Birmingham museum is 80 x 79 x 4.6mm What does the description say? Birmingham example: Quote
ROKUJURO Posted March 25, 2022 Report Posted March 25, 2022 David, KO-SHOAMI (not SHAOMI) is a school that was popular about 1500 or earlier. Your TSUBA looks to be much later, but this is only my guess based on your photos. 1 Quote
DAY Posted March 25, 2022 Author Report Posted March 25, 2022 Thanks Jean, sometimes my brain slips out of gear. Tsuba looks "newer" than the ko-shoami time frame. The paper that came with it "A-1987 Iron, openwork of a noren, blowing in the wind. Circa 1700 $8.00 Duplicate in ROM" "A-1987" is the tag that is attached to the tsuba. As the tsuba was sold out of Wisconsin I am guessing ROM is the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto. Seller claims it came for a collector who was traveling into Japan in the 60's hence the $8.00. Thanks to both of you this is a good step on my educational journey. Quote
Spartancrest Posted March 26, 2022 Report Posted March 26, 2022 http://thumb1.zeppy.io/d/l400/pict/144416322943/antique-1700-Japanese-Japan-samurai-sword-tsuba-iron-openwork-noren-guard-vtg Yours I presume. One in the Ashmolean Museum Oxford. http://jameelcentre.ashmolean.org/collection/7/10237/10365 EAX.10776 A variant found here. -- https://www.agsa.sa.gov.au/collection-publications/collection/works/tsuba-doorway-curtain-design/36454/ Another - https://www.earmi.it/armi/tsuba/tsuba.htm [picture quality not so great.] One up for auction now with papers - https://www.jauce.com/auction/r1039267825 Perhaps someone can translate them? Quote
MauroP Posted March 26, 2022 Report Posted March 26, 2022 Here a tsuba (縄暖簾図透 - nawanoren no zu sukashi) attributed by NBTHK to Inshū Suruga school. Quote
DAY Posted March 26, 2022 Author Report Posted March 26, 2022 yes Dale I am now the current caretaker of this... The original listing photos were quite poor. Thank you all for providing these images and info. David 2 Quote
DAY Posted August 23, 2022 Author Report Posted August 23, 2022 Just received this one from AOI-ART. 78mm x80 mm x4mm 1 Quote
Toryu2020 Posted August 25, 2022 Report Posted August 25, 2022 Nawa Noren - the drunkards paradise... 1 Quote
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