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I inherited a sword and need help


ddily

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Hello!

 

So I inherited this sword from my wife's great uncle. 

 

He was a marine during WW2 and captured this sword while clearing out a bunker during the battle of the Philippines. He has a journal entry talking about it and a photo of him holding it and smiling.

 

I would love some help on what to do with this. I have a friend who suggested I post it here. He gave me a Japanese sword cleaning kit he got while he was in Japan and taught me how to clean it. He is stumped by it. He thinks it is very very very old. 

 

Would love to know more about it and how much it is worth as I might be willing to part with it.

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Hi Josh, welcome to the forum. Very nice sword, it does appear to be an older blade but we would need photos of the tang to be sure. Would love to see the photo of the Marine holding it. As for care, just keep the blade lightly oiled and nothing more.

 

With such great history, maybe consider keeping it in the family?

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2 hours ago, Mark S. said:

And be careful about offers made by PM.  Know what you have first.  

Exactly. Looks like a nice blade that is a good candidate for polish and restoration. But first I would take it to a sword show that has a Shinsa section. San Fran isn't too far from you. 2024 is over but there will be another next year. Looks older than WW2 production, and has 2 mekugi (holes in the tang) which is a good sign for an older blade.

 

Can you measure the Nagasa? (measured from tip directly across to the mune machi (notch that the habaki sits against).

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The older blade has been fitted for the war in Type 98 Japanese officer fittings.  You can read about them here:

http://ohmura-study.net/934.html

 

Like John said, a close-up of the nakago (tang) will help the guys with date estimates, and if there is a smith name.

 

The nagasa measurement HB is asking for is here:

measure.thumb.gif.772262e661e251553c1200106e31525a.gif

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Josh,
 

to help you with the identification of your sword, your photos should be:
 

- well focused, not foggy or blurry
- made with a dark, non reflective background for good contrast
- made with light from the side (may not apply for HAMON photos)
- made from directly above (not at an angle)
- made with correct orientation (vertically tip-upwards, especially NAKAGO photos) 
- without HABAKI but showing the MACHI and NAKAGO JIRI 
- made in high resolution to see details
- showing details of the blade (magnification) like BOSHI, HAMACHI, HAMON, HADA, NAKAGO JIRI etc.
- presented as cut-outs so very little background is shown
 

If you cannot supply good photos (..."these photos are all I have from the dealer...."/..."I do not have a good camera but only an old mobile phone...." ), DO NOT POST THEM. They will not be helpful.

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Hi all!

 

 

 

Thank you for the feed back. I am currently at work and will report back with the following request:

 

 

 

Measurements in metric

 

Better photos of the blade and the tang

 

Charcoal print of the tang

 

 

 

 

 

I will say I see extremely faint marking and been advised to use candle soot and tape. If that is not the best way to do it, please advise.

 

 

 

Thank you

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Hi Josh,

Do not use soot and tape and do not listen to anyone who recommends it; it causes damage to the patina. A clear photo of each side of the tang, taken with a raking light (from the side to better show markings) and on a dark background will do fine.

Here you will find a care and handling brochure; you should read it twice but use micro fibre cloth rather than uchiko to remove old oil:

https://nbthk-ab2.or...ord-characteristics/

Grey

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19 hours ago, Lewis B said:

Exactly. Looks like a nice blade that is a good candidate for polish and restoration. But first I would take it to a sword show that has a Shinsa section. San Fran isn't too far from you. 2024 is over but there will be another next year. Looks older than WW2 production, and has 2 mekugi (holes in the tang) which is a good sign for an older blade.

 

Can you measure the Nagasa? (measured from tip directly across to the mune machi (notch that the habaki sits against).

67.5cm nasaga

 

 

 

3cm kissaki

 

 

 

18.5cm nakago

 

 

 

Total length 85.5cm

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6 minutes ago, Bruce Pennington said:

Years of steady, my friend! And specializing in that kind of thing.

 

The fittings are a quality upgrade. The pierced tsuba and 8 seppa are always on quality swords.

 

That makes complete sense, you see enough and learn over time, you gain a trained eye.

 

Consider me very ignorant, what does that mean? 

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19 minutes ago, David Flynn said:

Looks, Shinshinto to me. But it needs to be submitted to a shinsa. I'm basing this on the colour of the rust and the two holes.  I've seen quite a few Shinshinto and Gendaito, with holes like this.

Just curious, could the rust be misleading. What I mean by that is when it was fitted for the gunto fittings, couldn't someone knocked off some rust off the tang?

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Slight update, I sent an email to Ted Tenold, this is what he said:

 

I’ve looked over the images of your sword. It’s really difficult to clearly define many details from images, though you have done an admirable job in photographing the sword. It looks like it could be a candidate for restoration. Looks maybe early 17th century or perhaps very late 16th century. Could be a candidate for restoration but would ultimately require an in-hand evaluation to confirm it’s condition and workmanship.  

 

The koshirae is little better than average quality Type 98 Imperial Japanese Army Shingunto, in which the older blade has been fitted. There were a number of professional shops that supplied officers with the service of remounting older swords into new mountings, or supplying them with newly made traditional or non-traditionally made swords as military sidearms.  

 

 

 

He also said he is currently not accepting new projects and referred me to reach out to a local where I am located. I am going to have the blade inspected in person Friday. Happy to provide more updates 

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Hi Josh,

It is good that someone who knows more than you is going to see your sword in hand but I suggest you go that far and no further for now. You don't know anywhere near enough to make informed decisions about possible restoration and shinsa. Polish and shinsa may be appropriate for the sword but there is no reason to hurry; polish does nothing to preserve the sword - a light coating of oil does that. See: I'm new to Japanese swords and I want to get my 1st sword polished and/or have koshirae made for it. in FAQ under Nihonto Info above.

The more you know before you spend money on the sword the happier you'll be with the results.

Grey

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17 minutes ago, Grey Doffin said:

Hi Josh,

It is good that someone who knows more than you is going to see your sword in hand but I suggest you go that far and no further for now. You don't know anywhere near enough to make informed decisions about possible restoration and shinsa. Polish and shinsa may be appropriate for the sword but there is no reason to hurry; polish does nothing to preserve the sword - a light coating of oil does that. See: I'm new to Japanese swords and I want to get my 1st sword polished and/or have koshirae made for it. in FAQ under Nihonto Info above.

The more you know before you spend money on the sword the happier you'll be with the results.

Grey

I'm not having it polished. I'm having it looked over in person by a person recommended by Ted, to figure out what I have, and provide recommendations on next steps. If anything I would want it rewrapped, 

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1 hour ago, robinalexander said:

Josh, Grey (above) is so right....just take in, what he is meaning :)

 

Oh wow I sounded like a jack ###. Sorry about that.

 

Ted and I had a good phone call this morning.

 

Long story short is he would need to see it in person to give a better idea what this sword is. He said it's an older blade and could be an excellent candidate for a polish. He also said that he is too busy and can't accept anything at this moment and connected me to Scott Colton up in Washington. He said him and his partner would be able to provide more insight about it.

 

The steps I will probably be taking is:

 

Get it in the hand of the expert to figure out what I have.

 

Possibly get the handle rewrapped, as the wrapping is extremely delicate and has increasingly gotten worse just by handling it to take pictures. 

 

Post findings and probably sell the blade. It's not that I don't have interest in this blade, I'd rather find someone who could give this blade proper respect and care.

 

 

 

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On 9/10/2024 at 5:46 AM, Grey Doffin said:

Hi Josh,

It is good that someone who knows more than you is going to see your sword in hand but I suggest you go that far and no further for now. You don't know anywhere near enough to make informed decisions about possible restoration and shinsa. Polish and shinsa may be appropriate for the sword but there is no reason to hurry; polish does nothing to preserve the sword - a light coating of oil does that. See: I'm new to Japanese swords and I want to get my 1st sword polished and/or have koshirae made for it. in FAQ under Nihonto Info above.

The more you know before you spend money on the sword the happier you'll be with the results.

Grey

 

On 9/10/2024 at 5:31 PM, David Flynn said:

Better photo's would also be a help.

 

Update.

 

The blade was made by Hizen family member. 

 

They dated to early Shinto 

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