Gabriel L Posted May 25, 2010 Report Posted May 25, 2010 Hello all, I just wanted to show off my recent acquisition (courtesy of NMB member Curran): a sashikomi-polished yanone. I was immediately drawn to the yanone not only for the scarcity of polished examples, but also because I am not sure I've ever seen one polished in sashikomi. It also had a decent size (2.5" point, 5.4" ubu nakago) and a very cool "flame" hamon, so I decided to try and photograph it. It ended up being remarkably difficult to photograph—my tripod is currently in another state, so handholding macro images at 1/8th of a second really pushed my skills! But I'm happy with the results, which also show some of the hada. Thanks very much to Curran for the cool item, and I hope you all enjoy! Quote
watsonmil Posted May 25, 2010 Report Posted May 25, 2010 Dear Gabriel, Nice of you to share with us your latest acquisition. It looks to be a twin to one I own. Mine is signed Kiyotsugu saku. Enjoy ..... it looks very beautiful. ... Ron Watson Quote
Bugyotsuji Posted May 25, 2010 Report Posted May 25, 2010 I am forced to agree with Ron, :D except for the part about owning a signed Yanone! :lol: Well done Curran. Beautiful, Gabriel. Clever photography. No overall shots with the Nakago? I have a handful of assorted Yanone/Yajiri from the owner of the keys to the Kura of Kameyama Castle, but as you intimate, they are like most, sadly rusted and pitted. Nevertheless I have had some fun evenings with very fine sandpaper. Jealous in the Far East. Quote
Curran Posted May 25, 2010 Report Posted May 25, 2010 Wow. Wish i could take photos like that of the Morokage and tsuba. I never could capture the flame quality of the sashikomi polish. Morokage has it too, but way beyond me to capture it. *sigh*. Thank you for sharing. I'm glad this went to someone who appreciates it and can share it better with the forum. Good luck Gabriel. Quote
Jamie Posted May 25, 2010 Report Posted May 25, 2010 Great pictures. That's is a nice piece. I saw one recently but I couldn't see a temper in it at all. It wasn't rusted or stained, but no evident temper. Quote
watsonmil Posted May 25, 2010 Report Posted May 25, 2010 Dear Jamie, The smiths didn't often bother with putting a hamon on Yanone. I think they simply found it too time consuming for something that may well not be recovered once used. More often I think they gave them an overall temper. Again only a few are signed, .... just too time consuming to try cutting those tiny kanji ... Ron Watson Quote
Jamie Posted May 25, 2010 Report Posted May 25, 2010 Thanks for the info, that makes sense. The one I saw was still attached in the arrow, so I am not sure if it was signed or not. It was in good enough shape and polish though, a temper would have been visible, if the whole thing weren't tempered. Again, Thanks Jamie Quote
Gabriel L Posted May 25, 2010 Author Report Posted May 25, 2010 Piers, ask and ye shall receive. Not a great shot (weird mix of tungsten and daylight colors reflecting) but good enough for dimensions. Thanks everyone for the comments! Quote
Bugyotsuji Posted May 26, 2010 Report Posted May 26, 2010 Many thanks, Gabriel. Nice little box too! These arrowheads when they come up tend not to be cheap. Lots of fakes going around to catch the unwary, though... Quote
loui Posted May 28, 2010 Report Posted May 28, 2010 It doesn't always have to be an old Koto katana to make you stop and take a look eh. Very nice little piece! Regards, Louis Quote
Curran Posted May 28, 2010 Report Posted May 28, 2010 It was a favorite of mine for a long time. Glad it went to Gabriel and he could photograph it well. The Oei Morokage I have listed also has an incredible sashikomi polish which I wish I was able to get photographed as well as Gabriel has done. I lament that it is increasingly rare to see works, especially Bizen works done in sashikomi polish. To see it done well on an arrowhead was a rare treat when I got this arrowhead from Japan many years ago. Quote
watsonmil Posted June 18, 2010 Report Posted June 18, 2010 Dear Gabriel, Back in May, .... you posted some photos of a sashikomi polished yanone. I mentioned in that thread I had a twin to your yanone .... signed Kiyotsugu saku. I beleive it is of the Nio Chosu School and the smith from Nagato Province. Circ. 1688 - 1736. The point on mine is 2.5 inches, ... Nakago is 5 3/4 inches. Other than the very slight difference in Nakago length, .... as I said previously they appear to be near twins. Since my son was out today, I got him to take a couple of photos for comparison. .... Ron Watson Quote
Gabriel L Posted June 20, 2010 Author Report Posted June 20, 2010 Thank you for posting that Ron, it looks like a nice yanone as well. :-) I'd love to one day own some polished examples of complex karimata and yanagi-ba yanone, but those are uncommon and expen$ive as we all know. In the meantime my simple togari-ba example will do nicely. Quote
Carlo Giuseppe Tacchini Posted June 22, 2010 Report Posted June 22, 2010 Nice one Gabriel. Once I was near to purchase it myself from Curran. Happy it's gone to you. I'd love to one day own some polished examples of complex karimata This and a good Jumonji yari are the two types of blades I badly want. Quote
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