charlieboy Posted February 17, 2024 Report Posted February 17, 2024 Greetings. I am hoping somebody may be willing to authenticate this sword and identify the signature and age. Quote
Seth Posted February 20, 2024 Report Posted February 20, 2024 I might be wrong, and I am sure someone will correct me swiftly if that's the case, but I do not believe this is of Japanese origin. Seems very crude and the mei and habaki look way off. Can you slide the habaki off the blade? 1 Quote
Ron M Posted February 20, 2024 Report Posted February 20, 2024 I second what Seth states. I agree on his thoughts and also add that, with very few exceptions, a Japanese smith would never finish a tang (nakago) like this 1 Quote
ROKUJURO Posted February 20, 2024 Report Posted February 20, 2024 Second KANJI is KAWA (= river), but as stated above, not Japanese. Probably very recently made. Charles, the first photo is upside-down which does not help us in reading. In any case, we cannot provide authentications on the forum, this has to be done by a SHINSA committee. They first look at the blade and its features, and then at the signature. 1 Quote
Bugyotsuji Posted February 20, 2024 Report Posted February 20, 2024 枝川 Edagawa (For what it's worth.) 2 Quote
Bruce Pennington Posted February 20, 2024 Report Posted February 20, 2024 For what it's worth, I find no WWII smiths that use "川" in thier mei. There are lots of smiths with gawa in their real name, but not in the mei. It is found in location names. Edogawa is a ward in the Tokyo area, but I don't know if they spell it the same way. Quote
ROKUJURO Posted February 20, 2024 Report Posted February 20, 2024 Charles, even if your sword had no signature at all, it would easily be recognizable as non-Japanese. Quote
Bencld Posted February 21, 2024 Report Posted February 21, 2024 It’s not a willy jeep spring is it ? Made to trick some sucker out of their money during the war !! Quote
charlieboy Posted February 21, 2024 Author Report Posted February 21, 2024 On 2/20/2024 at 12:56 PM, Seth said: I might be wrong, and I am sure someone will correct me swiftly if that's the case, but I do not believe this is of Japanese origin. Seems very crude and the mei and habaki look way off. Can you slide the habaki off the blade? Hi Seth. I've tried getting it off, using boiling water to expand it, but have had no luck. Seems to me, whichever way I look at it, the blade is not of Japanese origin. I am now trying to find out if it was an 'island made' sword and, if so, for whom and when. I appreciate your reply!! Quote
charlieboy Posted February 21, 2024 Author Report Posted February 21, 2024 11 hours ago, ROKUJURO said: Charles, even if your sword had no signature at all, it would easily be recognizable as non-Japanese. Thanks for your feedback. I appreciate it. Quote
charlieboy Posted February 21, 2024 Author Report Posted February 21, 2024 19 hours ago, Bugyotsuji said: 枝川 Edagawa (For what it's worth.) Thanks Piers. I appreciate it! 1 Quote
Seth Posted February 21, 2024 Report Posted February 21, 2024 12 hours ago, charlieboy said: Hi Seth. I've tried getting it off, using boiling water to expand it, but have had no luck. Seems to me, whichever way I look at it, the blade is not of Japanese origin. I am now trying to find out if it was an 'island made' sword and, if so, for whom and when. I appreciate your reply!! Charlie, if you can’t get it off that’s a bad sign and typical from what I have personally seen with many Chinese swords. I swear they put them on with hammers, it’s all mass produced one size fits all. Could be wrong though just my thoughts. Quote
2devnul Posted February 24, 2024 Report Posted February 24, 2024 On 2/21/2024 at 7:28 PM, Seth said: Charlie, if you can’t get it off that’s a bad sign and typical from what I have personally seen with many Chinese swords. I swear they put them on with hammers, it’s all mass produced one size fits all. Could be wrong though just my thoughts. They 'glue' it, I mean Tsuka on Nakago. @charlieboy Total newbie here, but I would also vote for Chinese fake. Quote
Paz Posted February 29, 2024 Report Posted February 29, 2024 Correct me of I'm wrong. But I see no characteristics of a Japanese sword, par the shape. 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.