svend Posted December 27, 2011 Report Posted December 27, 2011 My father recently passed away. He always had this hanging in his room and was an MP during the occupation after the war in which he stated he acquired this. I tried to translate the info but it is above my ability. I think it would be nice to learn about this. Any help would be greatly appreciated by me and my family. Quote
svend Posted December 27, 2011 Author Report Posted December 27, 2011 Here are the rest of the pics.. Thanks again for anyone that can help Quote
cabowen Posted December 27, 2011 Report Posted December 27, 2011 Your sword is signed Bushu ju Kanetane (also read Kanetatsu). There were two generations: the first worked around the Kanei period, the second, Kanbun. They worked in Musashi (Edo area) but were from the Echizen Seki school. Quote
svend Posted December 27, 2011 Author Report Posted December 27, 2011 Wow.. Thanks Chris! So 1624 - 1673 ish.. amazing... What does the Tsuba say? (yeah, I have been reading, at least I know the correct names ) I think my dad said its not original to the sword as he may have picked it up later... not sure, he did not talk about it much. Quote
Mark Green Posted December 27, 2011 Report Posted December 27, 2011 Svend, Sorry about your loss. Nice sword, And wonderful tsuba. Could we get some better pics of the tsuba please. The sword looks in good order, from what you can see. Ma be worth restoring. Get some fine oil on it soon. Thanks for sharing. Mark G Quote
Ludolf Richter Posted December 28, 2011 Report Posted December 28, 2011 The Tsuba has a big-name-mei ("Hamano Naoyuki" with Kao ,Haynes H 06907,born 1754) which I believe is Gimei.Ludolf Quote
svend Posted December 30, 2011 Author Report Posted December 30, 2011 Here is the requested, and hopefully better pic of the tsuba. I guess if it is Gimei might as well be a big name mei Quote
nagamaki - Franco Posted December 30, 2011 Report Posted December 30, 2011 I guess if it is Gimei might as well be a big name mei cheers , yes, oil the sword, and change the oil frequently, at least once a week for the first month, wiping away the rust and grime that begins coming off, use unscented kleenex and do not rewipe with soiled tissue. Quote
Ruben Posted January 2, 2012 Report Posted January 2, 2012 Dear Gentlemen, I am not well adjucated, but the tsuba looks to me poor made (near to fake) and someone filed the nakago- ana bigger. greetings Ruben Quote
Curran Posted January 3, 2012 Report Posted January 3, 2012 As Ludolph said, "Hamano Naoyuki" with Kao (personal mark). I have not compared against reference signatures, but Naoyuki is a big name. His work is usually very crisp. First impression of the signature is that it lacks something. Your tsuba has seen some abuse and abuse, but is a nice enough tsuba. Workmanship is better than many we see on NMB, but not what I would expect of Naoyuki. The signature is probably gimei, but still respect the tsuba. Quote
Mark Green Posted January 4, 2012 Report Posted January 4, 2012 The tsuba is very nice imho. I like it a lot. Could be gemei, but still very nice. Mark G Quote
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