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Posted

Hi all,

 

Could someone with more knowledge of tsuba motifs clarify what this Kinai tsuba motif is called. I've encountered "triple diamond" and I believe "pine bark". I thought it might be a mon, but couldn't find one like it so I'm guessing that's not right. 

Screenshots_2024-08-30-10-46-51.thumb.png.c1df3c8e5dbbb7b10cb997219f1f598d.png

Screenshots_2024-08-30-10-46-25.thumb.png.47280cb87a035d1307cf367f463a3d39.png

Also, would you say those are birds or geese near where the ana would be? And are the arrows up, down, left and right just a product of the rest of the design, or could they represent something else?

 

This is a nice katana size piece with a nicely looking and feeling patina.

 

Appreciate all of your insights. 

 

Damon

  • Like 1
Posted

Thank you everyone. That's the term I was looking for, Matsukawa-bishi. And thank you Dale for the many examples you attached.

 

Damon

Posted
3 hours ago, Bugyotsuji said:

There are many stories as to its meaning, why this mon was chosen, and why loved by so many families in so many arrangements.

Is there a particular source for that material that you can share, Piers, or do you mean just available on the internet in general?

 

Damon

Posted

Valid question, Damon. I had heard one story which fascinated me, so looking for backup confirmation I was reading a long explanation in Japanese today but it didn't mention the original one that I'd heard. So between them all, I suddenly remembered other more pressing things I had to do around the house!!! :laughing:

 

Working backwards, there is a type of diamond-shaped mochi in three colours (pink, white and green) which is part of a traditional March Girls' Day display, probably harking back to when preserved foods would tide people through the winter months. But why was it diamond-shaped? The story I heard was that in times of famine, when there was nothing to eat, people would pull diamond-shaped chunks of Kawa 皮 bark off Matsu 松 pine trees and boil them up as a sort of last-gasp soup. The pine trees now stripped of their bark would have these Hishi/bishi 菱 diamond patterns on their trunks, Matsu + kawa +hishi/bishi. Now here comes the bushi warrior angle. During the seige of a castle the defenders might eventually resort to this, (like Charlie Chaplin eating his boots) and to the dried warabi and zenmai ferns besides which were purposely placed into the mud/daub walls for just such occasions. Castles, warriors, seiges, hardship, all of this is evoked by the Matsukawa-bishi, Pine bark diamond shape.

 

In my mind when I see the kamon my immediate association is the famous Ogasawara Daimyo family of Kokura, Hiroshima, and presumably the Ogasawara Islands.

  • Like 1
Posted

There’s another explanation that the matsukawa-bishi is actually derived from the fruits of water-caltrop, called "hishi" .

 

Wassernuss_Samenkapseln.thumb.jpg.7cac346bc962cbae57cca68d67f80211.jpg

 

BTW: The matsukawa-bishi pattern is a very old design and could be found on textiles in the Shoso-in already.

 

Best,
Florian

  • Thanks 1
Posted

Yes, 菱 Hishi is water caltrops, also sometimes water chestnut, the origin of the word, the shape traditionally described as lozenge or diamond-shape.

 

The matsukawabishi kamon shape of pine bark come from this word, i.e. matsukawa + hishi. I do agree that it seems to have melded or blended back towards incorporating elements of the original pointed/spiked caltrop shape.

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