Ray Singer Posted January 5, 2023 Report Posted January 5, 2023 Sharing a two-part video with a bit of information on the Honjo Masamune. Credit to Guido Schiller, Jim Kurrasch and Markus Sesko. Part I https://www.instagram.com/reel/CnA6ecejQx7/?igshid=OGQ2MjdiOTE= Part II https://www.instagram.com/reel/CnA7iTKPI1-/?igshid=OGQ2MjdiOTE= 13 5 Quote
waljamada Posted January 5, 2023 Report Posted January 5, 2023 Really enjoying these videos Ray. Thanks for another one and a very interesting topic. 1 Quote
Okan Posted January 5, 2023 Report Posted January 5, 2023 Dear Ray, can you please upload these to youtube as well? I don't use Instagram and I like to go back and forward And thank you for these videos! edit: Oh they are already on youtube!! Sorry about that. 1 Quote
cju777 Posted January 5, 2023 Report Posted January 5, 2023 For a second I was expecting Ray to post a video saying he finally found it! Nice work, enjoying the lot of videos so far. 2 2 Quote
Seth Posted January 6, 2023 Report Posted January 6, 2023 5 hours ago, cju777 said: For a second I was expecting Ray to post a video saying he finally found it! Nice work, enjoying the lot of videos so far. This was my knee-jerk reaction as well when I saw this pop up haha. Can you imagine? Great videos Ray! I know most people prefer short videos but I would have no issue listening to you teach on longer videos. Looking forward to the next one! Quote
lonely panet Posted January 9, 2023 Report Posted January 9, 2023 great orator. very enjoyable, nice a snappy presentation for those who dont get to sit down for long Quote
AlexCaz Posted October 19, 2023 Report Posted October 19, 2023 Hi Ray I really enjoyed watching these videos! I am curious at the time stamp 3:20 in the video “part II” did you say the honjo masamune has a horimono? I may have misheard you since I thought there was no horimono on the blade based on the oshigata drawing. Best Regards, Alex Quote
vajo Posted November 7, 2023 Report Posted November 7, 2023 @AlexCaz as i know Ray he would not say something he didn't know. My hope is he had found it and now the sword is in Japan to find out it is authentic. Why i wrote this? I hope to get invited for the party in Florida 1 Quote
AlexCaz Posted November 9, 2023 Report Posted November 9, 2023 @vajo I didn’t mean anything disrespect of course I just thought he said a word that sounded like “horimono” and was curious if there is another similar sounding word in Japanese with a different meaning. I’m trying to constantly expand my knowledge about the intricacies of nihonto. Quote
AlexCaz Posted December 28, 2023 Report Posted December 28, 2023 I’ve since learned the term he used was “futokoromono” which is a set of kozuka and kogai. I misheard Ray and thought he said horimono. 1 Quote
vitamin Posted June 12, 2024 Report Posted June 12, 2024 Wait... the Honjo Masamuna was not that great actually? Would that mean it could have been mistaken as nothing special and melted down? Also wasn't there recently a display by Tokugawa family of some koshirae said to be of the HM, where they said only the blade was turned over to the police? Link: https://tsumugu.yomiuri.co.jp/feature/桃山展「本庄正宗」の刀装初公開/ Like why would someone like that turn over both koshirae and blade, surely they knew the koshirae were also valuable? 1 Quote
ROKUJURO Posted June 13, 2024 Report Posted June 13, 2024 On 6/12/2024 at 3:23 AM, vitamin said: ......Would that mean it could have been mistaken as nothing special and melted down?.... No, that would not happen as swords are never melted down. The worst thing that could happen to a sword is the OROSHIGANE furnace. But a KAMAKURA blade would not be mistaken, I think. Quote
vitamin Posted June 15, 2024 Report Posted June 15, 2024 On 6/13/2024 at 5:24 AM, ROKUJURO said: No, that would not happen as swords are never melted down. The worst thing that could happen to a sword is the OROSHIGANE furnace. But a KAMAKURA blade would not be mistaken, I think. I was under the impression all the swords taken by US army to the depot to be melted down were checked by experts, but if HM was not as nice a sword as it was supposed to be, maybe they didn't recognize it and it got melted down anyway. But definitely some swords were melted down. Quote
ROKUJURO Posted June 15, 2024 Report Posted June 15, 2024 Jonathan, the term "melting" was technically not fitting in my opininon. You need 1.538°C to melt iron, and recycling steel that way is done on an industrial base in blast furnaces. I don't think that would happen in Japan. But what do I know.... perhaps some swords indeed ended that way! Quote
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