Bugyotsuji Posted October 24 Report Posted October 24 細違い角家紋 Try linking it like this with 'kamon'. Quote
Bugyotsuji Posted October 24 Report Posted October 24 Oh, and today I found this one. Iron, ribbed. Acorns? The togishi asked if he could polish it, so I said ‘sure’! Came up nicely. 4 2 1 Quote
Brian Posted October 24 Report Posted October 24 Wow, that's a stunning one! Lovely hada and hamon. Really stunning. 1 1 Quote
C0D Posted October 24 Report Posted October 24 I should post most of my collection, but i selected a few pieces: Ko-tosho, big, early and unaltered Onin, big and unaltered without much loss of zogan And my pride, tensho koshirae from late Muromachi with its original blade still inside. All lacquered black, simple iron tsuba with most of urushi still in place 11 6 1 1 Quote
Tim Evans Posted October 25 Report Posted October 25 10 hours ago, C0D said: And my pride, tensho koshirae from late Muromachi with its original blade still inside. All lacquered black, simple iron tsuba with most of urushi still in place Nice! Also really rare, especially outside of Japan. Here is one I have. I date it a little newer, probably late 1500s to mid 1600s, Owari style koshirae. Iron fuchigashira, tsuba, and kozuka. I apologize for the last image being upside down. It seems the website is ignoring the exif orientation tags. 5 Quote
Bugyotsuji Posted October 25 Report Posted October 25 Many of these would appear to be magnetic! 1 Quote
Iekatsu Posted October 25 Report Posted October 25 16 hours ago, C0D said: And my pride, tensho koshirae from late Muromachi with its original blade still inside. All lacquered black, simple iron tsuba with most of urushi still in place Very nice, I would love to see some more images of your Koshirae. 1 Quote
C0D Posted October 25 Report Posted October 25 Here's some more pics, also one of the blade inside, from the sugata it's most likely a late Kamakura tachi. It has a very unique and interesting utsuri as well, still under study 2 1 Quote
Tim Evans Posted October 25 Report Posted October 25 22 hours ago, Tim Evans said: I apologize for the last image being upside down. It seems the website is ignoring the exif orientation tags. For some reason I am not able to edit my initial post. Anyway, some images right side up. 2 1 Quote
Tim Evans Posted October 25 Report Posted October 25 14 hours ago, C0D said: Here's some more pics, also one of the blade inside, from the sugata it's most likely a late Kamakura tachi. It has a very unique and interesting utsuri as well, still under study I am curious, is the tsuka-ito lacquered? it looks like the fuchi is lacquered also. Quote
Rivkin Posted October 26 Report Posted October 26 I collect iron kozuka and kogai, they tend to be early, these guys are Muromachi, the "namban-ish" style is probably Momoyama. 6 Quote
C0D Posted October 26 Report Posted October 26 5 hours ago, Tim Evans said: I am curious, is the tsuka-ito lacquered? it looks like the fuchi is lacquered also. Yes, everything is lacquered, there's also traces on the seppa. Probably that's why it preserved so well 1 1 1 Quote
Tim Evans Posted October 26 Report Posted October 26 Thanks Manuel. One other question, is there a pocket for a kozuka in the saya? I see there is a kozuka hitsuana in the tsuba. 1 Quote
C0D Posted October 26 Report Posted October 26 No, there's no kozuka slot. The saya Is plain with horn koiguchi, kurikata and kaerizuno, kojiri Is missing 1 Quote
Iaido dude Posted October 26 Report Posted October 26 On 10/24/2024 at 10:21 PM, Ed said: Ono Fantastic, Ed. I'm a big fan of bonsho and have been waiting to see rarer Kanayama/Ono examples that are more lively than the frequently encountered Owari. What are the dimensions? Quote
kissakai Posted October 27 Report Posted October 27 A bit late to the show but these are among my favourites. I didn't what to overload with images so my two Onin tsuba didn't get in! 1 Six Ken Umetada Mumei 1550 Papered 2 Moon amd Pines Owari Nobuie 1600 3 Hanabishi Tosho Mumei 1500 Papered 4 Oxalis Tosho Mumei 1525 5 Pines and Waves Akasaka Mumei 1725 Papered (late but nice) 6 Crossed hats Owari Toda Hikozaemon 1525 7 Rain Katchushi Mumei 1450 8 Plumb and Oxalis Katchushi Mumei 1475 7 4 1 Quote
ROKUJURO Posted October 27 Report Posted October 27 Grev, all very nice! No. 4 is SAKURA (cherry). Quote
Alex A Posted October 27 Report Posted October 27 Really like how the pines are done on the Akasaka. Grev. 1 Quote
Rivkin Posted October 27 Report Posted October 27 Don't know how far early one wants to go. I guess Kofun is weird copper-iron alloy, with the usual gilding, gold with a large content of tin and other elements. 5 2 2 Quote
Rivkin Posted October 27 Report Posted October 27 That's something considerably more rare. Most continental guards are Chinese crossguard type until 12-14th century when you can start finding the early "tsuba" form. There are however exceptions - this is 10th century continental tsuba. Its obviously considerably more narrow compared to 14th century examples and bears some limited similarity to Kofun examples. Of note here the iron habaki bears the same edge decor as the tsuba and was made by the same hand, that of a swordsmith. By comparison soft metal habaki and guards would likely be a specialized trade. 3 1 1 Quote
Ed Posted October 31 Report Posted October 31 On 10/26/2024 at 12:53 PM, Iaido dude said: Fantastic, Ed. I'm a big fan of bonsho and have been waiting to see rarer Kanayama/Ono examples that are more lively than the frequently encountered Owari. What are the dimensions? 2.42" x 2.41" x 0.20" Quote
Ron M Posted November 1 Report Posted November 1 4 hours ago, Ed said: Another Ono I have a similar one to yours. I posted this on here before and the lovely Ford Hallam commented that he thought it was muromachi and slightly cut down form it’s original size regards 4 3 Quote
Curran Posted November 1 Report Posted November 1 It doesn't seem I have any photos of my Bell Owari. @Ed would like that one. I've been meaning to submit it to shinsa for a few years now, but I'm not so keen on shinsa time and opinions these days. To further encourage the love for Ono tsuba, I'm posting an old favorite Tokugawa mon Ono. It is one of those with narly woodknot shaped tottetsu along the mimi. 3 2 Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.