Andy P Posted October 14, 2024 Report Posted October 14, 2024 Thank you for your assistance translating the mei. Seki stamped showato, stamp/kanji only on one side as shown (I had to adjust the contrast etc, the surface oxidation and file mark texture competed with the kanji). Hard to discern towards the end. Quote
Nobody Posted October 14, 2024 Report Posted October 14, 2024 濃州関住服部正廣作 - Noshu Seki ju Hattori Masahiro saku 5 1 Quote
Andy P Posted October 14, 2024 Author Report Posted October 14, 2024 Thanks so much for the quick response, I am new to the hobby, the translation gives me something to study Quote
ROKUJURO Posted October 14, 2024 Report Posted October 14, 2024 Andy, the photos are quite good, but to enhance the contrast, it will be helpful to use a dark, non reflective background. Quote
Andy P Posted October 14, 2024 Author Report Posted October 14, 2024 Thank you Jean, seems like an especially challenging task to photograph blades (especially swords because of the length), I am sure it drives people nuts that are trying to photograph a beautiful sword and have it look like an old polaroid (makes me appreciate the craft behind good blade photos). 2 Quote
Bruce Pennington Posted October 16, 2024 Report Posted October 16, 2024 On 10/14/2024 at 10:21 AM, Nobody said: 濃州関住服部正廣作 - Noshu Seki ju Hattori Masahiro saku Wow. You and Ray are both Jedi Warriors of mei reading!!! Andy, you already know about the Seki stamp, so you probably already know that the stamp was used between 1940 and 1944, with most of the dated blades made in 1942. It should be a good looking blade with the large Seki stamp present. Quote
Andy P Posted October 16, 2024 Author Report Posted October 16, 2024 Hi Bruce, I followed your arsenal marks thread to help identify the partial seki stamp, I purchased this locally from an acquaintance, he pointed out the arsenal mark and said it meant it was either non-traditional or possibly a tan stamp and could be traditional (I know he knew it was seki but suggested some ambiguity to help with the sale), as soon as I saw the blade I could see the hamon looked weak and not what I expected (and I didn't see grain of any kind, I've since identified the hamon as oil quenched), my gut feeling was it was non-traditional but was in complete type 98 fittings with tassel in fair/good condition so I knew as a military collectible it would be something I could later sell and it would give me some experience examining a non-traditional blade in wwii fittings (my mother was Japanese and was born in hawaii 4 months before pearl harbor, so the wwii connection has some personal interest even though I'm not a military collector). The blade has original patina and hasn't been disturbed but the condition is rough with edge nicking, evidence of bends, an edge twist and has scrapes and scratches suggesting it was whacked around or played with (I suppose it could have been in combat but it is what it is). This was my first sword purchase so I looked at it as a positive learning experience (even though I wanted what I've since learned is Nihonto), I've been building a library and have been studying the details in various listings to learn the complex terminology and try to develop an understanding of what I find personally interesting in terms of form/smith/age etc (trying to avoid impulsive novice buys and understanding how a series of smaller purchases, while satisfying could have been put towards a single more important piece in a collection, that's the hard part of collecting anything, discipline!!). I think I want to focus on tanto/wakizashi perhaps collecting a few pieces but with a focus on study of the history and art form. This is such a great forum and community, I was thrilled to have such a quick translation by Moriyama Koichi. And discovering the downloads section on this site is such an incredible resource (at some point a donation is going to be in order). 1 1 Quote
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