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Posted

Hello 

 

Im looking and considering this Mihara Masanobu ( end of nanbokucho ) and wanted to ask for some opinions on this bo hi .

 

I ve never purchased blades with a bo hi so im not very fond of them but this ones seems awfully close to the kissaki border. My first thought was that the kissaki has been reshaped significantly in the past but the boshi looks very healthy and similar to other ko mihara blades i ve seen. 

 

Thank you

-Kevin L

SmartSelect_20250211_125804_Chrome.jpg

SmartSelect_20250211_125752_Chrome.jpg

Posted
37 minutes ago, klee said:

My first thought was that the kissaki has been reshaped significantly

 

 If so, then, how significantly?  

 

Was this originally Chu Kissaki? Elongated Chu Kissaki?

 

Another good reason to have references like Yamanaka's Newsletters revised to research what should be expected.

 

While bo-hi are frequently found on Nambokucho period nihonto, it is important to ask is it ato-bori?

 

What does the rest of this blade look like?

Posted

If you are not fond of bohi and this one already seems odd to you, it isn’t going to get better after you purchase it. I recommend that you pass on it and find something that is more pleasing to your eye.

  • Like 2
Posted

This is Tokubetsu Juyo sword - Sadatsugu (Sadatoshi?) (Ayanokoji) (Yamashiro) (19. Tokubetsu Juyo) 

https://www.token-ne...u-sadatoshi1412.html

It has bo-hi almost exactly like "your" sword. So I would say it is OK. 

 

The translation of names of the smith and school is automatic from Japanese, so don't kill me please :)

  • Like 1
Posted
3 hours ago, Honya said:

This is Tokubetsu Juyo sword - Sadatsugu (Sadatoshi?) (Ayanokoji) (Yamashiro) (19. Tokubetsu Juyo) 

https://www.token-ne...u-sadatoshi1412.html

It has bo-hi almost exactly like "your" sword. So I would say it is OK. 

 

The translation of names of the smith and school is automatic from Japanese, so don't kill me please :)

Hi Jan,

On the example you kindly posted it also appears as if the kissaki has been reshaped over time - not surprising in blades of this age!

 

image.thumb.jpeg.3d67e723aff902893f47d639fdf8ccde.jpeg

  • Thanks 1
Posted
Quote

On the example you kindly posted it also appears as if the kissaki has been reshaped over time - not surprising in blades of this age!

 

I's a ko-kissaki, and the first quality of a good polisher is not to transform the architecture of a sword: a ko kissaki must remain a ko-kissaki and a chu-kissaki must remain a chu-kissaki. 

  • Like 2
Posted
5 minutes ago, Jacques said:

 

I's a ko-kissaki, and the first quality of a good polisher is not to transform the architecture of a sword: a ko kissaki must remain a ko-kissaki and a chu-kissaki must remain a chu-kissaki. 

Unless the kissaki is damaged.

  • Like 1
  • Confused 2
Posted
23 minutes ago, Jacques said:

 

I's a ko-kissaki, and the first quality of a good polisher is not to transform the architecture of a sword: a ko kissaki must remain a ko-kissaki and a chu-kissaki must remain a chu-kissaki. 

Agreed Jacques.

But would you say that the smith originally intended the boshi to be this close to the edge of the kissaki? Wouldn't that have been very impractical in such a time of warfare?

IMG_9528.jpeg

Posted
16 hours ago, Jacques said:

I don't see anything wrong with this, it's common for the late Kamakura and Nanbokucho period. It's called Hisaki agaru.

Thank you Jacques for providing the term. Made it a whole lot easier find and look at other examples

Posted
2 hours ago, KungFooey said:

Agreed Jacques.

But would you say that the smith originally intended the boshi to be this close to the edge of the kissaki? Wouldn't that have been very impractical in such a time of warfare?

 

 

Are you under the impression that, the wider the hamon / boshi / greater size of turnback, the stronger the blade? Research indicates quite the contrary.

Posted
34 minutes ago, Tcat said:

 

Are you under the impression that, the wider the hamon / boshi / greater size of turnback, the stronger the blade? Research indicates quite the contrary.

Not at all. I'm sure that a fully tempered kissaki chips and breaks just as easily as one with hardly any boshi left.

However I would much prefer to start off with the former than the latter if engaged in a battle so that the point can be reshaped if necessary.

Posted

I'm not saying it's bad..... or wrong.....or unfashionable - it's just really thin. 🙄
As long as the kissaki is never, ever chipped again, everything is just fine and peachy.

Posted
4 hours ago, Lewis B said:

Unless the kissaki is damaged.

No, i had a tachi with a broken chu kissaki, the polisher (Zenon van Damme) returned the sword with the same type of kissaki.  

  • Like 2
Posted (edited)

There is evidence that this kissaki has been altered. When the kissaki was reshaped it appears that the polisher chose not to reshape this sword closer to its original form. This observation can be taken any way you want, but it is still an observation. 

Although it may be difficult, when appraising a sword, for whatever reason, try to imagine what the sword looked like in its original form in an attempt to try and better understand what the swordsmith intended.

Buy what you like, but understand what you're buying.

As you were.

Edited by Franco D
rewording
  • Like 2
Posted
4 hours ago, Franco D said:

There is evidence that this kissaki has been altered. When the kissaki was reshaped it appears that the polisher chose not to reshape this sword closer to its original form. This observation can be taken any way you want, but it is still an observation. 

Although it may be difficult, when appraising a sword, for whatever reason, try to imagine what the sword looked like in its original form in an attempt to try and better understand what the swordsmith intended.

Buy what you like, but understand what you're buying.

As you were.

I disagree. A good polisher would rather leave the defect than transform the shape of the kissaki. The one on the juyo looks very much like an ikubi kissaki 猪首切先  (common for this smith).

  • Confused 1
Posted
17 hours ago, Jacques said:

I disagree. A good polisher would rather leave the defect than transform the shape of the kissaki.

 

22 hours ago, Franco D said:

When the kissaki was reshaped it appears that the polisher chose not to reshape this sword

 

Well, which is it? [Please] make up your mind.

  • Haha 1

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