Haon Posted August 29, 2022 Report Posted August 29, 2022 So, I'm currently designing a tsuba for myself, and I've decided to go with the shape of aoi gata, as it is supposed to be mounted on a tachi. Can you show me any pictures of tsuba from the late kamakura era, so after the mongol invasions, preferably with sukashi or animal engravings? I might be completely wrong on this one, but most articles I can find on the Internet are either really short /bear almost no information and repeat themselves after the third one. I understand that what I'm asking for is propably rare. Also, does anyone have high resolution pictures of the tsuba and hilt of the statue of Kusunoki Masashige? Best regards, Haon PS: the tachi this is for is a modern made piece, no nihonto will be touched during this process. Quote
rkg Posted August 29, 2022 Report Posted August 29, 2022 Kamakura period tsuba - silver fukurin may not be original. kind of plain, but I hope it helps. Best, rkg (Richard George) 4 Quote
Spartancrest Posted August 30, 2022 Report Posted August 30, 2022 Derek these might help. https://varshavskycollection.com/kamakura-bori-tsuba/ https://www.mandarinmansion.com/glossary/aoi-gata https://www.aoijapan.net/tsuba-mumeiunsignedkamakura/ Quote
Curran Posted August 30, 2022 Report Posted August 30, 2022 Kamakura-bori style tsuba have little to do with the Kamakura period. The "wood carving style of the Kamakura period" tsubas do not => tsubas from Kamakura period. Careful with that. RKG's tsuba is actual Kamakura<->Nambokuchu. 2 Quote
Toryu2020 Posted August 30, 2022 Report Posted August 30, 2022 Curran is right - the Kamakura in Kamakura-bori is from the place name and not the time period. Chinese style, cinnabar lacquered wood carving is a local specialty in Kamakura to this day - the name I believe is a later appellation given the close appearance and likely inspiration from Kamakura style wood carving... -tch 1 Quote
Spartancrest Posted August 31, 2022 Report Posted August 31, 2022 You want a cinnabar lacquered wood carving? You got it! 1 1 2 Quote
Haon Posted August 31, 2022 Author Report Posted August 31, 2022 Thank you very much for your information, it was helpful but there are a lot of ideas and questions in my head, still. The wooden tsuba is an unusual piece, it looks incredibly awesome and cursed at the same time. 1 Quote
Chris Colman Posted September 8, 2022 Report Posted September 8, 2022 Translated from a Kamakura Bori tsuba for sale: The origin of the name of Kamakura Tsuba is neither the name of the place nor the name of the era. It is said to have originated from a technique that imitated the safflower and green leaves method used by the grandson of Buddhist sculptor Unkei when he made Buddhist altar fittings for Hokke-do in Kamakura. With the addition of Zen Buddhism's era, the two were mixed together and unified into Japanese sensibilities to give birth to what is called 'Kamakura tsuba'. It is said that it flourished from the end of the Muromachi period to the Momoyama period and disappeared in the early Edo period. 3 Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.