Thekirsh Posted January 3, 2012 Report Posted January 3, 2012 Hi Everyone, I would appreciate any thoughts or information on this small tsuba which appears to be "The Great escape" Thanks Simon Quote
John A Stuart Posted January 3, 2012 Report Posted January 3, 2012 I love mieces to pieces. No, really a nice theme, of luck. This is a Nara 奈良 family work, I think, although I so far fail to recognise the last kanji. John Quote
Baka Gaijin Posted January 3, 2012 Report Posted January 3, 2012 Morning all, Are they mice or rats? I think the object they are giving their attention to is a rice bale, the sort of thing that Daikokuten stands upon. http://www.nihonsun.com/2009/02/17/deco ... ice-bales/ http://www.onmarkproductions.com/html/daikoku.shtml http://www.ashmoleanprints.com/image/67 ... -rice-bale Cheers Quote
Guido Posted January 3, 2012 Report Posted January 3, 2012 Are they mice or rats?There's no difference in Japanese, both are called Nezumi 鼠. Quote
Baka Gaijin Posted January 3, 2012 Report Posted January 3, 2012 Morning all There's no difference in Japanese, both are called Nezumi 鼠. Cheers Guido Quote
Soshin Posted January 3, 2012 Report Posted January 3, 2012 There's no difference in Japanese, both are called Nezumi 鼠. Are rats called O-Nezumi (大鼠). Just a quick Japanese language joke. :lol: Overall the tsuba looks like a nice Nara school tsuba. How large is the tsuba? If it is on the small size I would say that it is for a tanto. Yours truly, David Stiles Quote
Baka Gaijin Posted January 3, 2012 Report Posted January 3, 2012 Afternoon all I was told the term for rice bale is Tawara. Cheers Quote
Ruben Posted January 3, 2012 Report Posted January 3, 2012 Hi, interesting tsuba. In my opinion these are rats, cause of the tails. Especially the very left one shows a rippled naked tail. greetings Ruben Quote
Thekirsh Posted January 4, 2012 Author Report Posted January 4, 2012 Thanks everyone for the information, I will check out the Nara school works. John - I've added a close up of the mei David - the tsuba is actually perfectly round with an O.D. of 69 mm. I also noticed that it is the only tsuba I have come across that is slightly convex. Cheers Simon Quote
John A Stuart Posted January 4, 2012 Report Posted January 4, 2012 Yes, 作 saku. Perfect, just what the doctor ordered. John Quote
johnb Posted January 4, 2012 Report Posted January 4, 2012 So if mouse and rat are the same in Japanese, does that make our Disney chum Mickey Rat? Love the tsuba! John b Quote
Guido Posted January 4, 2012 Report Posted January 4, 2012 So if mouse and rat are the same in Japanese, does that make our Disney chum Mickey Rat?Nope, our anthropomorphic little friend is simply called ミッキー (マウス) in Japanese. He/it is neither considered a mouse nor a rat, just a cartoon character.Sorry for going all linguistic on you . Quote
johnb Posted January 5, 2012 Report Posted January 5, 2012 Ahhh...In Indonesia he becomes Mickey Tikus...Tikus being either a rat or mouse. John Quote
george trotter Posted January 9, 2012 Report Posted January 9, 2012 So if mouse and rat are the same in Japanese, does that make our Disney chum Mickey Rat? Love the tsuba! John b I'm a bit late to this thread, but if it helps the Mickey Mouse question, I heard that his father was a rat :lol: I like the tsuba too...love the meeces. There was a tanto/wakizashi koshirae at the last Sydney Shinsa and it had mice dressed as humans in clothes...my favourite part was that the head of the kodzuka was a little mouse face looking at you through the hole in the tsuba...very nice! About rats in the rice-bale...I think this is common in art and refers to wealth, ie, a person so wealthy that he/she doesn't worry about rats eating the rice...so in a roundabout way it means good fortune. Of course I stand to be corrected. Regards, Quote
cabowen Posted January 9, 2012 Report Posted January 9, 2012 It's not that you have so much that you don't worry about losing a bit to the rats, it is that you have something in the first place! Quote
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