Bridges Posted March 25, 2023 Report Posted March 25, 2023 Hello all, as the title states a late war shin-gunto has somehow made it to my remote antique store and I need an opinion on the piece. The seller is asking 1,500 but has negotiated it down to 1,000 flat (cash USD). However, as you can see, the saya is severely damaged and he has noted the blade unsigned. The mekugi looks to be replaced and I am currently in my car outside this shop without my references in hand. I did not expect to see this so I did not attempt nor have the tooling to remove the mekugi to see for myself. My question is, authentication (first time seeing something other than a type 19 in the wild), his price point, and the tsuba looks oddly like the iron ones on “souvenir swords”. Whatever input anyone has would be greatly appreciated as I’ve never seen anything other than what I mainly collect (parade swords) in hand. Quote
Bruce Pennington Posted March 25, 2023 Report Posted March 25, 2023 Noah, The saya and tsuba are civil, with the RS tsuka added, to "militarize" it for the war. It's likely to have a civil blade in it too, could be something old? Interesting piece! I think you got a decent price there. 1 Quote
Bridges Posted March 25, 2023 Author Report Posted March 25, 2023 Thanks Bruce, I appreciate the feedback. I was a little cautious due to the saya being partially destroyed but the blade is in great shape. With this being a civil sword, I’m assuming it’s likely machine made and less likely hand forged? I apologize for no pictures of the tang, that would’ve been a great help Quote
ChrisW Posted March 25, 2023 Report Posted March 25, 2023 29 minutes ago, Bridges said: Thanks Bruce, I appreciate the feedback. I was a little cautious due to the saya being partially destroyed but the blade is in great shape. With this being a civil sword, I’m assuming it’s likely machine made and less likely hand forged? I apologize for no pictures of the tang, that would’ve been a great help What Bruce means by "civil blade" is a sword that was made prewar and not in a large factory setting, AKA probably hand-forged by a blacksmith. Dismounting the blade from the tsuka and looking at the nakago would be the tell in this case. 2 1 Quote
b.hennick Posted March 25, 2023 Report Posted March 25, 2023 Look at the tang.. Remove the habaki as you do not want to find a hagire at home. 2 Quote
mdiddy Posted March 26, 2023 Report Posted March 26, 2023 @Bridges I have had several of these and they have always had a low quality, crude blade in them (see attached photos). I think the chances of scoring an old nihonto in this kind of koshirae is extraordinarily low. I think it's more accurate to call the tsuba and saya 'crudely mass-produced' instead of 'civil'. 23 hours ago, Bruce Pennington said: Noah, The saya and tsuba are civil, with the RS tsuka added, to "militarize" it for the war. It's likely to have a civil blade in it too, could be something old? Interesting piece! I think you got a decent price there. @Bridges I don't like to comment on other peoples deals, but I would recommend being wary of some of the valuation advice you may be getting here. Feel free to reach out directly with questions, happy to help. 3 1 1 Quote
dwmc Posted March 26, 2023 Report Posted March 26, 2023 Geez Matt, had I the misfortune of the swords you shared above, I would most definitely be wary also... Dave M. Quote
mdiddy Posted March 27, 2023 Report Posted March 27, 2023 20 minutes ago, dwmc said: Geez Matt, had I the misfortune of the swords you shared above, I would most definitely be wary also... Don't feel bad for me Dave, I paid a lot less than what I sold them for. Cha-ching. But that does give me some extra insight in knowing what they are truly worth. Not really what I collect per se, but if one is sourcing late war variants, ya kinda gotta embrace the misfortune? 1 Quote
PNSSHOGUN Posted March 27, 2023 Report Posted March 27, 2023 Boy that Nakago would be a real bummer to see. 1 Quote
mdiddy Posted March 27, 2023 Report Posted March 27, 2023 33 minutes ago, PNSSHOGUN said: Boy that Nakago would be a real bummer to see Yeah, I can think of about 1000 reasons why. Here's another one I dug up. Similar, but a little different flavor, yet with another crude nakago. 2 Quote
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