Tsubafan Posted April 19, 2022 Report Posted April 19, 2022 Here is my latest purchase, unfortunately the blade is in bad shape... is it a UNOKUBI ZUKURI shape? The Habaki and all other fittings are in solid silver with simple but nice Katakiri bori engravings. Mei on nakago seems to read HinaMitsu. Is there any ways to know which Hinamitsu swordsmith it could be (there are 7 generations of Hinamitsu) What about the Koshirae, you think Edo or Meiji? I believe there is a space for a Kogai or maybe a small Kogatana? 1 Quote
Grey Doffin Posted April 19, 2022 Report Posted April 19, 2022 I think the koshirae is Meiji, if not later. The blade could be earlier. Grey 1 Quote
Tsubafan Posted April 19, 2022 Author Report Posted April 19, 2022 7 hours ago, Brian said: Hisamitsu, not Hhina.... Oops sorry my bad, typo error indeed. Yes I meant Hisamitsu ! There are at least 7 swordsmiths as per nihonto club index. Quote
Brian Posted April 19, 2022 Report Posted April 19, 2022 Both the tanto and the koshirae have a late Meiji feel to them. I would suspect out of those listed, it would be by: (Just a guess) Quote HISAMITSU (久光), Keiō (慶応, 1865-1868), Dewa – “Shimizu Ise no Kami Tenseishi Rai Hisamitsu” (清水伊勢守 天聖子来久光), gō Tenseishi (天聖子) 1 Quote
Tsubafan Posted April 19, 2022 Author Report Posted April 19, 2022 Thanks a lot Brian and Grey. For what it is worth, the part of this set that I like most is... the Habaki ! Quote
oli Posted April 19, 2022 Report Posted April 19, 2022 Hi, can i ask a newbie question? The design remind me, as it is art deco design. Can it be? Or was this kind of design, not in Japan? thanks Oliver Quote
Tsubafan Posted April 19, 2022 Author Report Posted April 19, 2022 Hello, you probably meant Art Nouveau (c 1900) with its typical flowers and insects decorations. Art Deco is a later period (c 1920) with less decoration and more symmetrical designs. 1 Quote
Surfson Posted April 19, 2022 Report Posted April 19, 2022 I think it is a nice little tanto Louis, and yes, it is unokubi zukuri (cormorant's neck). The tsuka appears to possibly have baileen wrap on it (made from the filtration system of whales, and quite rare). 1 Quote
Tsubafan Posted April 21, 2022 Author Report Posted April 21, 2022 I have read some articles on baleen wrap and can confirm this is the material used on my tsuka. Very good remark Robert! Thanks for pointing that out. Unfortunately some parts are missing… i paid 900 € for this set, I hope this was a correct price. Quote
Franco Posted April 21, 2022 Report Posted April 21, 2022 On 4/19/2022 at 2:19 AM, Tsubafan said: Is there any ways to know which Hinamitsu swordsmith it could be (there are 7 generations of Hinamitsu) Quote 2022 NTHK West Coast Shinsa - Yes its happening! Toryu2020 replied to Toryu2020's topic in Sword Shows, Events, Community News and Legislation Issues Yanchen - The shinsa process is exactly the same as in Japan - the personnel are exactly the same as in Japan, they will just be in Burlingame this time around. No one should get us confused with the NBTHK - we are much more a collector focused organization, in every instance we attempt to provide attributions to particular smiths, including generation and time period, we do this even if an item is rejected... 1 Quote
drbvac Posted April 22, 2022 Report Posted April 22, 2022 Nice - I would think the blade worthy of a polish and would be a very impressive piece. 1 Quote
Bugyotsuji Posted April 22, 2022 Report Posted April 22, 2022 Many dealers will just pass these along as is, but often, like yours they are worthy of some TLC. This will cost money, and you may well not end up making a profit, but on a personal satisfaction level there is plenty more reward than a fistful of crumpled dollars. It will keep rewarding you every time you look at it. PS I have something somewhat similar which I sent for polish, then sent for papers, and for which I recently had a shirasaya made. Some people said I was crazy, but that did not worry me. 2 1 Quote
Baba Yaga Posted April 22, 2022 Report Posted April 22, 2022 On 4/18/2022 at 11:19 PM, Tsubafan said: What about the Koshirae, you think Edo or Meiji? You can see by the wear by understanding long term cleaning esp silver, if indeed silver. This Koshirae has been taken care of very well over many decades of cleaning suggesting some thought of it be of great value, "to the owner". With that said, 50 to 100 years of cleaning. On 4/18/2022 at 11:19 PM, Tsubafan said: Quote
Matsunoki Posted May 17, 2022 Report Posted May 17, 2022 Louis….have you seen this one….. https://www.malcolmfairley.com/shoami-katsuyoshi-a-silver-mounted-aikuchi best wishes Colin Quote
Tsubafan Posted May 19, 2022 Author Report Posted May 19, 2022 Hi Colin, thanks for the link. Pretty interesting ! Quote
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