Nicholas Posted December 21 Report Posted December 21 Just wanted to share a recent find in Shin Gunto mounts a signed and dated Bishu Osafune Sukesada dated 1522 in exceptional condition. 5 2 Quote
Michaelr Posted December 21 Report Posted December 21 Beautiful piece, blade and mounts MikeR 1 Quote
Nicholas Posted December 22 Author Report Posted December 22 4 hours ago, Volker62 said: whats the swords measurements please? 23.5 inch nagasa Quote
Tensho Posted December 22 Report Posted December 22 Was this the one on ebay? I hesitated to long on deciding whether or not to buy it now. Quote
Conway S Posted December 22 Report Posted December 22 39 minutes ago, Tensho said: Was this the one on ebay? I hesitated to long on deciding whether or not to buy it now. Believe so. I saw it too. Conway Quote
Nicholas Posted December 22 Author Report Posted December 22 49 minutes ago, Tensho said: Was this the one on ebay? I hesitated to long on deciding whether or not to buy it now. 10 minutes ago, Conway S said: Believe so. I saw it too. Conway Yes it was. A woman was selling it. The sword came from her husband’s grandfather who served in ww2. She claimed the sword was in climate controlled storage for 50+ years. I knew it was something interesting when it was listed and I didn’t hesitate. I like the swords that come out of peoples closets, attics and basements that have been untouched for decades. 2 Quote
David Flynn Posted December 22 Report Posted December 22 I think this is probably a Kazu Uchi Mono, sword. Quote
KungFooey Posted December 22 Report Posted December 22 12 minutes ago, David Flynn said: I think this is probably a Kazu Uchi Mono, sword. Which means it was actually made for combat - not just for some high ranking fop to wear to a poetry reading. Awesome - this is my dream sword!!! Dee 1 Quote
PNSSHOGUN Posted December 22 Report Posted December 22 The presence of a Nengo is a good sign, Kazuuuchimono don't tend to be dated. Many of the great Sukesada smiths were active in the early 1500's. 2 1 Quote
Nicholas Posted December 22 Author Report Posted December 22 1 hour ago, David Flynn said: I think this is probably a Kazu Uchi Mono, sword. What brings you to that conclusion? Quote
Volker62 Posted December 22 Report Posted December 22 great package Nicholas!! congrat's as John said, the presence of a Nengo is a goos sign. 1 Quote
David Flynn Posted December 22 Report Posted December 22 Sorry John, but I've seen quite a few Kazu Uchi Mono, with date. Usually signed, Bizen (shu) (no) kuni Osafune Sukesada saku. 1 Quote
David Flynn Posted December 22 Report Posted December 22 53 minutes ago, Nicholas said: What brings you to that conclusion? Size, Shape, signature and Hamon. Quote
KungFooey Posted December 22 Report Posted December 22 🎶 Round and round the houses we go! 🎶 Dee😂 1 Quote
Alex A Posted December 22 Report Posted December 22 Forgot how many times ive seen in an Aoi write-up that swords made in or close to Eisho, of the style above are not of the low quality mass made "Kazu uchi mono" that are refereed to in the likes of Connoisseurs. I guess its the { } blanket statement scenario Sword above looks decent, if you see a low grade mass produced sword, you will know it. Many have passed through here over the years to look at. 3 Quote
KungFooey Posted December 23 Report Posted December 23 12 hours ago, Alex A said: Sword above looks decent, if you see a low grade mass produced sword, you will know it. Many have passed through here over the years to look at. Totally agree Alex! Below is what one of the real stinkers looks like. I don't see anything like that in the sword under discussion. Quote
David Flynn Posted December 23 Report Posted December 23 Depends on how they are cared for. Showing one example doesn't prove anything. Quote
KungFooey Posted December 23 Report Posted December 23 55 minutes ago, David Flynn said: Depends on how they are cared for. Showing one example doesn't prove anything. If something is a blatant heap of crap from word go (which is the inferred state of all Kazu Uchi Mono), then I don't think it really matters how well is cared for - do you? Dee x Quote
lonely panet Posted December 23 Report Posted December 23 side squabble aside the shinogi is very tall, how the kasanes?? Quote
Nicholas Posted December 23 Author Report Posted December 23 20 hours ago, David Flynn said: Size, Shape, signature and Hamon. The sword is definitely not high quality. But it certainly isn’t the lowest of low quality. I highly doubt this is a bundle sword. There was obviously some level of care used in forging this blade. The nioguchi is consistent throughout, the hada is consistent as well. No forging flaws present on the blade. Quote
David Flynn Posted December 23 Report Posted December 23 Kazu uchi mono, like all swords, come in various shapes and quality. Unlike showato, these swords paper. But hey, it's only my opinion. Personally I don't care one way or the other. Quote
KungFooey Posted December 23 Report Posted December 23 18 minutes ago, David Flynn said: Kazu uchi mono, like all swords, come in various shapes and quality. Unlike showato, these swords paper. But hey, it's only my opinion. Personally I don't care one way or the other. Actually, Showato do paper. 1 Quote
PNSSHOGUN Posted December 23 Report Posted December 23 Not sure if that's a fair point as papered Showato are very much an exception, not a rule. One gets the impression these are done as favours so a family can legally keep a KIA family members sword, or other circumstances not immediately apparent. Seeing these does really pull into question the Gendai Shinsa teams for NTHK & NBTHK. 1 Quote
KungFooey Posted December 23 Report Posted December 23 1 hour ago, PNSSHOGUN said: Not sure if that's a fair point as papered Showato are very much an exception, not a rule. One gets the impression these are done as favours so a family can legally keep a KIA family members sword, or other circumstances not immediately apparent. Seeing these does really pull into question the Gendai Shinsa teams for NTHK & NBTHK. Hi John! There's absolutely no need for the family to get shinsa papers in order to keep grandpa's sword - all they need is the torokusho. Then everything is legal. A hozon certificate is just icing on the cake for grandpa's family when they want to sell it along with all his medals. 😥 Quote
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