Tom Clancy Posted March 2, 2010 Report Posted March 2, 2010 Hi Any assistance with this translation would be greatly appreciated. Tom. Quote
huntershooter Posted March 2, 2010 Report Posted March 2, 2010 Smith appears to be MasaMichi. No help on the rest. Quote
Nobody Posted March 3, 2010 Report Posted March 3, 2010 I suspect that the original owner was given the sword by his parents at his departure. 為宗平博殿 – for Mr. Munehira Hiroshi 備後國住正道鍛之 – Masamichi in Bingo province forged this. 昭和十七年二月吉日 – a lucky day in February of 1942 父母 常在與爾 – [nonliterally] From father and mother; Always with you and give this to you. Quote
k morita Posted March 3, 2010 Report Posted March 3, 2010 hi, i believe that this sword was gift for the son from parents. The 1st pic: For Mr.MUNEHIRA Hiroshi. Bingo no kuni ju Masamichi kore o kitau. The 2nd pic: Feburuary,1942. Parents always be with you.(fubo wa tsune ni nanji to ari) Quote
Stephen Posted March 3, 2010 Report Posted March 3, 2010 Tom More pix please id like to see his work, always like these kind of mei, how proud the parents were very nice. Quote
k morita Posted March 3, 2010 Report Posted March 3, 2010 hi This swordsmith won the fourth seat (kasaku prize) in swords exhibition in 1939. Phot is the Tanto oshigata. His real sure name was Shinoki ,lived in Hiroshima pref. Quote
george trotter Posted March 3, 2010 Report Posted March 3, 2010 Morita san...I really like how your book (Nihonto oyobi Nihonshumi) has the actual oshigata of the winning swords...fabulous! If only this book (and journals) could be re-printed...Wareware no gendaito no shushuka wa, kono hon ga, irimasu yo! Thanks for these pics... Regards, George. Quote
Tom Clancy Posted March 3, 2010 Author Report Posted March 3, 2010 Firstly I would like to apologise for the delay in my reply, and I would like to thank everyone for their help. What would us mere mortals do without you guys Stephen here are a few pics you asked for Many thanks again Tom. Quote
Stephen Posted March 3, 2010 Report Posted March 3, 2010 wonderbar!! just a magnificent pick up. Looks like he did very fine work. how do you guys dig these up,what a find! Quote
george trotter Posted March 3, 2010 Report Posted March 3, 2010 wunderbar indeed! Was the sword in this polish when you got it Tom, or did you have it done? Regards, George. Quote
Tom Clancy Posted March 3, 2010 Author Report Posted March 3, 2010 Glad you like it Stephen.This is the only blade by shinoki masa michi that I have come across. If any members have any info regarding this smith it would be much appreciated. George: The sword was already polished. Tom. Quote
k morita Posted March 3, 2010 Report Posted March 3, 2010 Good sword,Nice jigane. :D Check Dr. Stein's below link and search "Shinoki". http://home.earthlink.net/~ttstein/tosho.htm 中上作 (CHUJO SAKU) 上工の上位 (Joko no Joi) Quote
James Posted March 3, 2010 Report Posted March 3, 2010 That's an awesome gendaito! Love it!! Thanks for sharing the additional photos! Quote
george trotter Posted March 3, 2010 Report Posted March 3, 2010 Tom, I had a look through my Japanese Gendaito references and can't find any trace of him in any of the post-war ones, so I suppose he didn't continue in swords after the war (or I missed him). I did find his name and address for Hiroshima Ken in the Nihon Token Shimbun 1942 publication "Dai Nihon Token Shoko Meikan" Page 304-17 (which is the reference quoted in the Rich Stein Tosho list linked by Morita san). No other information is given, but at least it is a source/page/date/reference for your files. George. Quote
Stephen Posted March 3, 2010 Report Posted March 3, 2010 http://search.freefind.com/servlet/free ... =masamichi Quote
Brian Posted March 3, 2010 Report Posted March 3, 2010 Very nice Gendaito indeed! And wonderful work by Moriyama sana and Morita san, almost at the same time :D What would we do without you..truly. Tom..please tell us you own this, and not just one that is passing by. It would be a very nice find. Brian Quote
Tom Clancy Posted March 3, 2010 Author Report Posted March 3, 2010 I would just like to thank NMB members for their kind comments and help. Brian: I took delivery of the sword on Monday the 1st March, glad everyone finds it an interesting blade. Tom. Quote
sensei215 Posted March 3, 2010 Report Posted March 3, 2010 Congratulations its a fine looking blade. I have just started to take an interest in gendaito and realize I have not fully appreciated the skill of the makers. When I first started to collect it was all about Koto blades and some Shinto ( god forbid if the machi had been moved ). I first became interested in swords because of a Japanese friend of mine who asked me to look for them at the gun shows that I regularly went to on the weekends. I became addicted but I think I also adopted some of his opinions. I learned a lot by handling blades. It wasn't unusual to see 20 to 40 swords at a big East Coast and there were very few buyers. Now if you see 1 or 2 clean blades its a lot. Tim S Quote
lonely panet Posted June 4, 2010 Report Posted June 4, 2010 thacongardulationst buy the pic's show is a fantastic gendai, i have a yusakuni gendai by kenzo yasunori and its not that good. congradulations, i hope it brings your alot of pleaser. Regards Hamish Quote
Tom Clancy Posted June 7, 2010 Author Report Posted June 7, 2010 Hamish, As I have said earlier on this thread I have tried to compare his work but have failed to find another blade by him. Was this a one off? or was most of his work done in similar style and quality. As you know Yasukuni-to are regarded as some of the best blades produced during that period so it is interesting that you find the Masamichi of better quality, because he is only rated Chujo Saku Regards Tom. Quote
James Posted June 7, 2010 Report Posted June 7, 2010 Just remember flamboyancy doesn't equal quality. The Yasukunito and the Masamichi would have to be held in hand and compared side by side to be able to make a call like that. Quote
cabowen Posted June 7, 2010 Report Posted June 7, 2010 Just remember flamboyancy doesn't equal quality. The Yasukunito and the Masamichi would have to be held in hand and compared side by side to be able to make a call like that. Bingo...... Quote
Tom Clancy Posted June 7, 2010 Author Report Posted June 7, 2010 That's an awesome gendaito! Love it!! Thanks for sharing the additional photos! Just remember flamboyancy doesn't equal quality. The Yasukunito and the Masamichi would have to be held in hand and compared side by side to be able to make a call like that. Sounds like that would be a bit of a contradiction. I am also a big fan of Elvis, Ali and Floyd Mayweather Jnr. Just remember flamboyancy doesn't equal quality. The Yasukunito and the Masamichi would have to be held in hand and compared side by side to be able to make a call like that. Bingo...... I thought bingo was a game for old women. Tom Quote
loiner1965 Posted June 7, 2010 Report Posted June 7, 2010 indeed a lovely well made sword....for the nihonto purists do you class this as showato or gendaito or just a hand made war time sword. Quote
Brian Posted June 7, 2010 Report Posted June 7, 2010 It has nie, hataraki and hada. So not a mass produced Showato obviously. I would call this Gendaito unless I had reason to believe that tamahagane wasn't used. Brian Quote
Tom Clancy Posted June 7, 2010 Author Report Posted June 7, 2010 Hi Steve for your comments. WW2 swords and smiths seem to be a can of worms and no one is exactly sure who made or signed what. It all appears to be guess work. A very eminent collector recently explained to me that collectors of Yasukuni-to do not want blades signed Kunimori to be associated with the hand of Miyaguchi other than the mei as this would devalue their blades. Regards Tom. UTD did well I am a Town fan. Quote
Jamie Posted June 7, 2010 Report Posted June 7, 2010 Very nice! Great activity. That looks well made. Quote
cabowen Posted June 7, 2010 Report Posted June 7, 2010 Hi Steve for your comments. WW2 swords and smiths seem to be a can of worms and no one is exactly sure who made or signed what. It all appears to be guess work. Well, things aren't always what they seem/appear! Some of us have a pretty good handle on the situation without a whole lot of guesswork involved.... A very eminent collector recently explained to me that collectors of Yasukuni-to do not want blades signed Kunimori to be associated with the hand of Miyaguchi other than the mei as this would devalue their blades. Lots of people, some who know better and many who don't, like to call blades signed Kunimori yasukuni-to-usually for sale purposes. This is incorrect and since they were not traditional blades, causes a bit of indigestion among those who appreciate traditionally made blades, Yasukuni-to inclusive... 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.