Yamazakura Fr Posted November 1 Report Posted November 1 Hello I have this new wakizashi with signature to identificate This is naoshi naginata (no yokote , unokobi zukuri, iori mune) total length 46,6 cm nagasa 36,2 cm Can anyone translate the signature (I think the thirth kanji for ju and the last hiro?) Regards Bernard Quote
Shugyosha Posted November 1 Report Posted November 1 Hi Bernard, Perhaps 相州住冬廣- Soshu ju Fuyuhiro. I'm not convinced about the "Fuyu" kanji though, so that's a bit of a a guess and hopefully someone else can either confirm or suggest a better match. Quote
Franco D Posted November 1 Report Posted November 1 10 hours ago, Yamazakura Fr said: This is naoshi naginata I see no evidence that this is anything more than a shobu zukuri wakizashi. 1 1 Quote
Toryu2020 Posted November 1 Report Posted November 1 If naginata-naoshi then all or part of the signature would be gone. This is ubu and I agree Soshu ju Fuyuhiro. 1 1 Quote
Yamazakura Fr Posted November 2 Author Report Posted November 2 Thank you for your information Sory for the naginata naoshi but I was misled by the shape of the unokobi zukuri blade that we find on the naginata but it is indeed a wakizashi ubu Does anyone have any information about the blacksmith Soshu Fuyuhiro koto because the only information I have concerns Fuyuhiro Jakushu (wakasa) we found Soshu Fuyuhiro in the Zuikan Tomei Soran with TS332 reference but I have not this Best regards Bernard Quote
Shugyosha Posted November 2 Report Posted November 2 The Shoshin website suggests that the first Wakasa Fuyuhiro was the son of the second generation Soshu Hirotsugu and moved from Sagami to Wakasa but I don't know any more: https://www.sho-shin.com/soshu.html https://www.sho-shin.com/hoku.htm Quote
Jacques D. Posted November 2 Report Posted November 2 I don't think it's Wakasa Fuyuhiro (both shodai and nidai). Quote
Rivkin Posted November 2 Report Posted November 2 Plus: the signature is ok written per 16th century standards. Its roughly in the right place, with roughly the right strokes pressure for Sagami school. Its quite a bit rougher though than the better Soshu smiths of the period. Minus: most likely unrecorded person. But then "hiro" kanji is Soshu kanji and its not at all impossible there was one within the school. Minus: Just like with Bizen, with Sagami you do have fakes of things which raise eyebrows why on earth one would fake that. It is a very popular school even for non-great objects. Its basically for you to decide. As is it is unlikely to paper - what if the work is just completely different and therefore the papers will look stupid after its polished. If you polish and its hitatsura than there is a good chance it will be accepted as unrecorded smith. Say it comes out as a lesser work in suguha, then its again a lottery - Odawara Soshu in particular produced suguha during its earliest (1470) and latest (1570) periods, but its more difficult to accept a combination of unknown signature and weird work. So I think its up to you. Roughly 50/50 chance its real. Quote
Jacques D. Posted November 2 Report Posted November 2 Quote with roughly the right strokes pressure for Sagami school. Explanations please Quote
dkirkpatrick Posted November 2 Report Posted November 2 Additional if unrelated question; what would the value even be if polished to a reasonable hitasura with saya and hozon to unknown Soshu smith? I can’t imagine it’d be a lot more than the cost of all of that, fair argument that there is value in a nihonto saved notwithstanding. Quote
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