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Go Yoshihiro... part 2


Andrew Ickeringill

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For those of you who don't use facebook, this is something I posted there recently, thought it was worth sharing with the board...

 

"Here we Go again…

 

So I don’t really know what to say, to have polished one Go Yoshihiro was an amazing experience, and I thought it was a once in a lifetime deal… turns out, it wasn’t.

This is a polish I’ve recently completed on a katana papered tokubetsu-hozon to ‘Den Go’.

 

Having studied Go for many years, handled several of his blades in Japan, and now completing my second polish on his work, I feel I’m developing a good sense of his style. There is a paradox in his blades, they're both controlled to the highest degree, and yet completely wild, vivid, and natural.

 

This is a very interesting example of his work, in some ways it’s quite different to the previous one I worked on, but they both share unmistakable similarities, particularly within the nioi-guchi and the finer areas of grain structure.

 

There’s an incredible amount of depth to the hamon, with layers of contrasting nie blanketed across the entire yakiba. Along the boundary of the hamon the nie is larger and has a mottled appearance, almost like lava flow, but on the inside of the yakiba there is fine ko-nie and nioi hataraki, which floats its way along the blade like cloud formations. This isn’t the kind of hamon that jumps up and slaps you in the face, there’s a subtlety to the nie which takes some time to absorb, but once it sets in, it reveals a vast array of delicate hataraki.

 

The jigane is quite diverse, with a variety of different textures and shades. Some areas show a uniform nashiji-like hada with evenly dispersed ji-nie and fine chikei, while other areas have a larger grain structure mixed with dark patches of steel containing more clustered ji-nie. There are many yubashiri, which appear in all different shapes and sizes, some emanating from the hamon like nebula, and others appearing from nowhere like floating orbs.

 

The boshi isn’t ichimai (which isn't unusual), it’s more like a kaen-style, with streaks of hakikake running from the yokote through to a short kaeri.

 

I wasn’t able to capture everything I wanted to in these pics, I tried my best, but in most places the nie extends from the hasaki all the way to the shinogi in one form or another, and it’s impossible to get it all in.

 

Well anyway, have a look and enjoy!"

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Andrew, can't express how much I admire what you do, and what you are able to do. And what a privilege to have the skill to be chosen for swords like this.

Thanks for sharing your journey with us.  :clap:

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