Robert S Posted April 17, 2024 Report Posted April 17, 2024 I had previously shared a photo of this tsuba in a post about the wakizashi I recently acquired, but I have some specific questions about it It's a copper alloy (shakudo) tsuba with a Shoami mei. Does the shape of the Nakago ana indicate that this was previously mounted on a sword worn edge down, or is there another reason for this shape? Does this work look like a Shoami piece? Is it possible that if it was converted from edge down mounting to edge up mounting, it was signed by the Shoami artisan that did the conversion? Any thoughts on the form of the "mi" character? I have seen this alternate form of the simplified character on a couple of tsuba attributed to the Iyo branch of Shoami. Thanks for all thoughts and wisdom! Robert S 1 Quote
MauroP Posted April 17, 2024 Report Posted April 17, 2024 A classical ko-kinkō tsuba, the waves design clearly would lose coherence if mounted on a edge-down blade. The signature looks quite amatourish in its quality, so mayby someone has carved it as a personal (and wrong) attribution. Just my hypotesis. 1 Quote
Spartancrest Posted April 18, 2024 Report Posted April 18, 2024 I don't think the tsuba was inverted it just shows signs of having been modified to fit a larger sword. 2 Quote
Robert S Posted April 18, 2024 Author Report Posted April 18, 2024 Mauro: I thought ko-kinko as well. It's odd that whoever put the shoami mei on it used the alternate form of the last character. Mysteries! Dale: That's great - really helps understand that shape! Robert 1 Quote
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