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Posted
16 hours ago, Jacques D. said:

Where do you see shintetsu ?  I think you need dot learn  hada. Last words about Rai hada, you can see chikei in this area can you see chikei in shintetsu ?

 

I know you are always saying we shouldn't judge blades from images, but i cant help but suggest that this is clearly core steel, a good example.

 

Now if someone told me they saw something in core steel that seems out of the ordinary id be asking myself why.

 

Not really thought much about it and only speculating, as don't know. Though odd conversations and seeing and reading stuff online about modern sword production and the re-use and re-temper of stuff left hanging around in workshops, kind of leads me to believe that anything is possible.

 

As said, i don't know and this is only a suggestion, though blades that show core steel really don't appeal to me.

 

Its back to that putting stuff in boxes scenario, who knows what one may come across with regards polished core steel in certain blades.

Posted

Kudos to the forumites (more patient than me...) that have taken the time to meticulously dispel this misguided belief that Kamakura swords never show core steel. 

 

Note that these swords - in spite of the core steel appearing in various forms - are Tokubetsu Juyo. First, Aoe and Rai are prone to showing core steel. Hence, the deterring factor is mitigated. But more importantly, the integrity and regularity of the Jigane are secondary factors. 

 

Consider the following traits: 

  • A Rai blade with an unexpected drop in clarity of the nioiguchi in a section of the hamon near the boshi
  • A late Aoe blade with ashi that slant only in the upper section of the hamon on one side
  • The unexpected presence of clumped nie in the O-choji of an otherwise flamboyant Ichimonji
  • A fall in the quality and variety of nie near the monouchi of a Soshu blade

 

These are subtle things that Westerners typically wouldn't care about that may cause massive penalties that reverberate both in the attainable level of certification and the end value of the piece on the market in Japan.  

 

The market knows this and acts accordingly. 

  • Like 1
Posted

Dear Jacques,

 

Nagayama describes chikei as black(Page 87), Sesko describes chikei as blackish, the NBTHK say,  that chikei are dark. You see chikei as white. That can only mean, that you have more and better information than the majority. Please, share your knowledge with us. At least I want to know...

 

Uwe G.

 

PS: I would descibe the white lines as jinie due to the lamination.

1b.JPG

  • Like 3
Posted

Jacques, those are totally different from the examples you posted previously and which were highlighted by Colin. 
 

In this recent batch there is no “Rai hada” in that there is no shingane showing. The previous ones clearly have shingane as they are the large dark areas (the ones that you suggested showed chikei). Read the Markus Sesko’s article: Rai hada is a different colour to the kawagane and it’s equivalent in Aoe blades is Namazu hada, which looks different to the surrounding metal and has the quality of cat fish skin.
 

What you have highlighted immediately above are not chikei nor shingane, just some rougher grain/ small kitae ware or perhaps as Uwe says, ji nie in the example with the more consistent grain. 

  • Like 3
Posted
51 minutes ago, Matsunoki said:

Just as an aside. I don’t think @Jacques D. would have seen the ones I highlighted earlier. I think he has me on “ignore” 🙂🙂having told me he will not answer me. 

Just in case @Jacques D. missed it. Plus an added bonus from a TJ Norishige. Classic Namazu IMHO

shingane.thumb.jpg.75545a26e4d32d8aa57ccfc49eb52695.jpg

 

 

Plus an added bonus from a TJ Norishige. Classic Namazu IMHO

 

 

image.jpeg.d9c1be537a9abf4a90872e5c4e305342.jpeg

 

 

 

  • Like 3
Posted
2 hours ago, Matsunoki said:

Just as an aside. I don’t think @Jacques D. would have seen the ones I highlighted earlier. I think he has me on “ignore” 🙂🙂having told me he will not answer me. 

 

Ah, I suspect that Jacques likes to live in a one-man echo chamber. :glee:

  • Haha 2
Posted
On 9/27/2024 at 4:29 PM, CSM101 said:

Dear Jacques,

 

Nagayama describes chikei as black(Page 87), Sesko describes chikei as blackish, the NBTHK say,  that chikei are dark. You see chikei as white. That can only mean, that you have more and better information than the majority. Please, share your knowledge with us. At least I want to know...

 

Uwe G.

 

PS: I would descibe the white lines as jinie due to the lamination.

1b.JPG

To me, these "white wavy lines" do not seem ji-nie at all
Rather, I think that it is an accentuation of the lamination as a result of the togi-shi work where this lamination seems to "open" a little if the stone of the right hardness is not used

  • Like 1
Posted

I'm appalled by the ignorance and lack of culture of some people: if the chikei appear white in the photos, it's only a matter of light reflection. You'll find the same thing on this tachi attributed to Norishige. That said, I give up and leave you to your beliefs, it's not my problem.

 

https://sword-auction.com/en/product/15644/as22601-刀:無銘則重(特別保存刀剣)/

  • Like 1
  • Haha 1
Posted

:flog:

 

Quote

I'm appalled by the ignorance and lack of culture of some people: if the chikei appear white in the photos, it's only a matter of light reflection. You'll find the same thing on this tachi attributed to Norishige. That said, I give up and leave you to your beliefs, it's not my problem.

 

Your sake cup is full. Unfortunately it will end up confusing a newcomer into the field, and we can't have that.  

 

Lo and behold: same sword, same light conditions. 

 

BLUE

JINIE.jpeg

 

RED

NMB_2.jpeg

 

Light doesn't make the dark chikei rings change color, no. 

 

 

 

  • Like 1
Posted

Why not use  the simple technique description of  chikei ? Chikei are lines of fine nie in the ji.  So if there is an nie line, than we  do have  chikei, if there is no nie line, no chikei. Regarding the  color : This has nothing to do with the defintion. Even nie  appears  in different colors,  i say only kuro ( black ) nie by  example. Another  example,  kinsuji and  ginsuji, both  are lines  of  nie, but  one  reflects more golden, the other silver. Differnt  colors  of  unhardend  steel are also not unsual.  So the only  way  to say  chikei  or not is the simple defintion.

Just my  two humble  cents.

Posted
31 minutes ago, Jacques D. said:

I'm appalled by the ignorance and lack of culture of some people: if the chikei appear white in the photos, it's only a matter of light reflection. You'll find the same thing on this tachi attributed to Norishige. That said, I give up and leave you to your beliefs, it's not my problem.

 

https://sword-auction.com/en/product/15644/as22601-刀:無銘則重(特別保存刀剣)/

Jacques - with all due respect to you


I agree that chikei has a specular sheen in daylight


But when taking photos in a room, chikei does not behave like this
For the photo you gave as an example, the lights are positioned so that there is no reflection of light from the surface of the blade

I've taken several thousand shots of blades and I've never photographed a chikei like this

 

Different blades and different light conditions

D85_2449 copy 2.jpg

D85_4756 copy.jpg

D85_0628 copy.jpg

  • Like 2
Posted
24 minutes ago, CSM101 said:

This discussion is like "chess with pigeons". 

Yes, it is so simple if one only understand what chikei  realy  is. The technical  def. is so dam easy. But  well, here are some chips  and  coke....next round  in the color-fight !

 

Posted
4 hours ago, Jacques D. said:

I'm appalled by the ignorance and lack of culture of some people: if the chikei appear white in the photos, it's only a matter of light reflection. You'll find the same thing on this tachi attributed to Norishige. That said, I give up and leave you to your beliefs, it's not my problem.

 

https://sword-auction.com/en/product/15644/as22601-刀:無銘則重(特別保存刀剣)/

One word

 

pictures

Posted
15 hours ago, Jacques D. said:

I'm appalled by the ignorance and lack of culture of some people: if the chikei appear white in the photos, it's only a matter of light reflection. You'll find the same thing on this tachi attributed to Norishige. That said, I give up and leave you to your beliefs, it's not my problem.

 

https://sword-auction.com/en/product/15644/as22601-刀:無銘則重(特別保存刀剣)/


So, as usual, you’re the one who’s right and everyone else is wrong. Thank God you’re here Jacques, where would we be otherwise? :crazy:

  • Thanks 1
Posted

I think it illustrates the point how subjective the "knowledge" can be, especially in a short term. My father once wrote that the only "science" which relies heavily on deduction and formal proof is mathematics, and maybe because of that mathematics might not be a "science" per se - instead of generating knowledge it converts it between equivalent representations. Some of which are arguably more useful than others.

Other fields remind me of famous economics paper by a conservative Nobel prize winner which demonstrated strong correlation between nation's debt and GDP growth... except the growth part was dominated by zero debt countries like Somalia.

 

To this point, I would address the issue of "chikei" in a bit different manner. Why use yet another term related to a nie formation?

The reason might be is that very high contrast hada with wide black lines can be formed in multiple ways. It can be that the steel has different amount of carbon (high tends to be dark grey) or slag (in polished steel aluminum oxide produces black and phosphorus - deep black color). It can be that its due to martensite formation with a specific size, which does create characteristic black lines, i.e. "chikei".

Therefore Houju hada while also black-striped is not seen as per se an advantage since many believe it has considerable "slag content" (though it was never tested afaik), but while in some poor images Norishige might look similar, more often than not it considered a superior steel since the black colored lines are formed by chikei. 

Overall, chikei is a telltale sign of upper end work, often present in Soshu and some other schools.

In a related manner, Inazuma when you just look at it, something "similar" can be produced by folding lines, but if it comes with nie concentration it becomes a sign of upper-upper grade Soshu work.

 

Posted

Agree with Kiril, as in subjective

 

Also, learned what anyone thinks here often gets turned on its head over the years and has little effect on what others may think.

 

Just too many variables.

 

Debating such issues now feels a bit pointless. 

 

Someone thinking they know it all, well, thats up to them.

 

 

Posted

A discussion is most fruitful when debating not stating. Taking things personally always ends up derailing things into senseless bickering, trust me there are never any victors in a forum fight. This thread is to me, very educational but it is starting to turn into the teachers fighting.

 

Gentlemen, agree to disagree the subject is open to different perspectives this is not about whether the earth is flat or not. 

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