Meanmonkey777 Posted December 13, 2006 Report Posted December 13, 2006 I recently bought a sword at auction it was dated from 1850-1899. Attached are the img with the writting. Is it jibberish or a poor/good fake, or real? any help? Quote
Bungo Posted December 13, 2006 Report Posted December 13, 2006 more like made yesterday.................. check out " fake swords " at top of this message board. milt THE ronin Quote
sencho Posted December 13, 2006 Report Posted December 13, 2006 What is known as a "Dremel" mei...... Cheers Quote
Gaijin Posted December 14, 2006 Report Posted December 14, 2006 Lol...give him a break guys :D , we all do mistakes, ...i do love the kozuka :lol: Quote
Meanmonkey777 Posted December 14, 2006 Author Report Posted December 14, 2006 thank you for the insight. I am new at this. If we where talking gemstones I would just as concided. The one thing that has thrown me off is the other two swords I bought where found orignal, but did not have the ballance that this sword has. Grandted the art work could be improved. however the sword has this unique balance that no other sword that I have come in contact with has. even more odd the imperal lotus flower is placed exactly right where the right and left hands would grasp the sword if an individual was right handed. The WWII sword that I bought was confirmed to be orignal non Nco,probally a majors sword. The other is loose but has the faint cloud and high polish. I would of discarded this sword if it did fit and hold as well as it did. I grasped the three lotus on the top and three on the bottom and it was the direct center of gravity of the sword. Now being new, is this a comon trick in fake swords? Quote
sencho Posted December 14, 2006 Report Posted December 14, 2006 Hi Vitali, Mocking the sword more than him... I agree.... I could have done this a year ago... luckily I found the NMB before the ebay crappers!!! Cheers Quote
Bungo Posted December 14, 2006 Report Posted December 14, 2006 not making fun of anyone, god knows we ALL make mistakes, but............. the only thing that looks half way " authentic ' in the whole set up are the two seppa. Don't know much about the " balance test " to authenticate Nihonto, but i guess they all feel sort of heavy in the hands. milt THe Ronin Quote
Meanmonkey777 Posted December 14, 2006 Author Report Posted December 14, 2006 I trust your judgement. This was a sword that was bought in WA state from Japan. I usualy talke what I find to experects in that area. Wether it be a 128 cts plum star sapphire or a WWII hand crafted oil forged sword. The blade looked right on target. Going by the info provided. Now if the blades decoration is crap. That is good to know. The important part is the blade its self. They claimed it was oil forged, with a shark skin wrap. Even though they claimed it was gold, sliver and brass inlay with the sword. It held blanced. Now if it was off center I wouldnt put it on here. This is where I am runing into problems. Is this a smith, or crap. Quote
Bungo Posted December 14, 2006 Report Posted December 14, 2006 based on the nakago and the mei inscribed........... it's a crap. p.s. forget the balance test. milt THE ronin Quote
sencho Posted December 14, 2006 Report Posted December 14, 2006 Yep.... listen to Milt, It is a fake chinese (probably) "crapper" as some of the guys like to call them. There are hundreds of them on ebay...... Not only the blade but also the fittings are very crude. It certainly isn't Japanese... Look at some of the links for commercial sites at the top of the page... Look at some of the swords on Moses Becerra's site http://www.nihontoantiques.com Look at the mei's and see how they are chisled, look at the intricate craftsmanship in the fittings and then look back at yours and you will see the obvious differences. I understand where you are on this... a year ago I did not know the difference and basically could not tell my arse from my elbow with this stuff... My first purchase was a book.... The Connessours Guide to Japanese Swords... Iy was a little heavy going for me for a beginner but I still learned quite a lot... I still use it and probably will for a long long time, so it was a good buy. Surf all of the commercial site you see up there and compare swords and look at the decriptions.... you will soon learn to recognise the basics.... ask lots of questions on here... these guys are great and only too happy to help... and use this site..... it is brilliant... I expect some stuff will be above your head, but all of the basics are in there.... http://www.geocities.com/alchemyst/nihonto.htm Cheers Quote
andreas Posted December 14, 2006 Report Posted December 14, 2006 Hmm sad . Can you tell us where did you buy this "thing" . another ebay issue? Quote
Gaijin Posted December 18, 2006 Report Posted December 18, 2006 I think he bought it here, i can never forget this kozuka :lol: http://cgi.ebay.com/OLD-Japan-SAMURAIS- ... dZViewItem Cheers. Quote
kusunokimasahige Posted December 18, 2006 Report Posted December 18, 2006 yep, i also have a very big reserve/NO GO feeling about this seller....... this blade also is definetely etched and in a way "damascened"....... however no where as nice or as near as this truly damascened Roman gladius Hispaniensis.... we are just discovering in some Roman swords that pattern welding was indeed done, starting probably towards end of the first century AD. KM Quote
Meanmonkey777 Posted December 18, 2006 Author Report Posted December 18, 2006 I was looking at the sword Gaijin had up, and every thing was exactly the same. Quote
Gaijin Posted December 18, 2006 Report Posted December 18, 2006 Coz they are fake. Yep...making fake swords in China and selling them from USA/Canada is a good business. Quote
andreas Posted December 20, 2006 Report Posted December 20, 2006 yeah, it just make's me wonder who will bother to do such a pease of "art", let see; it takes day or 2 to do all that "art" and what he will get, couple 100 .. and maybe some joy because of made it. I just can't find the words... Quote
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