kbt Posted March 23, 2012 Report Posted March 23, 2012 I would appreciate any info on this tsuba, I have seen many that were similar . Are these tsuba's common and generic ? I got it to go with the menuki and fuchi kashira I purchased. Any info would be greatly appreciated. Thank you Kim Toth Quote
Henry Wilson Posted March 23, 2012 Report Posted March 23, 2012 I think it is Soten school. http://www.google.co.uk/search?hl=en&sa ... mAWkzpG5Bg Quite popular because they are easy to enjoy in my opinion. A lot of tsuba have abstract designs, where Soten school specializes in carvings of people and events that casual observes like. Quote
kbt Posted March 23, 2012 Author Report Posted March 23, 2012 Thank you Mr Wilson, much appreciated . Kim Toth Quote
kbt Posted March 23, 2012 Author Report Posted March 23, 2012 The guy on the upper left seems to be missing his face, is that a inlay that has come off ? Kim Quote
kbt Posted March 24, 2012 Author Report Posted March 24, 2012 Does anyone know if these are Japanese characters or Chinese ? In the book "Japanese Sword Guards " it says the older tsubas had Chinese characters . Thanks Kim Toth Quote
John A Stuart Posted March 24, 2012 Report Posted March 24, 2012 Japanese. Check the armour. John Quote
kbt Posted March 24, 2012 Author Report Posted March 24, 2012 Are these Mogarashi characters and so Chinese ? That would date it to late 1600s to early 1700s. Am I close at all ? Kim Quote
John A Stuart Posted March 24, 2012 Report Posted March 24, 2012 Omi school tsuba of which Soten was part, maybe even Choshu school. There were many copyists of the style esp. later as export ware demand rose. John Quote
kusunokimasahige Posted March 24, 2012 Report Posted March 24, 2012 It is probably a depiction of one of the chapters from the Heike Monogatari. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Tale_of_the_Heike http://sonic.net/~tabine/heike081003/He ... npage.html KM Quote
Brian Posted March 24, 2012 Report Posted March 24, 2012 Just so there is no confusion...this is a pretty low class example. Top class Soten is very, very good. Search the forum for topics and examples. I am not 100% happy with the striations on the seppadai, or that "missing face" you mentioned. On the whole, it isn't one of the better examples. Brian Quote
kbt Posted March 24, 2012 Author Report Posted March 24, 2012 Thank you all, I hate to hear that Brian, I have a bit tied up in it. Kim Quote
Brian Posted March 24, 2012 Report Posted March 24, 2012 Kim, Well even average Soten can be a few hundred bucks, so unless you have a lot invested, as a mounting tsuba I doubt you did too badly. Remember that most times, any tsuba under $200-400 is usually generic average stuff. Brian Quote
Brian Posted March 24, 2012 Report Posted March 24, 2012 Good grief. There are such good deals being posted for less than that. Why drop that amount on something without great detail? Compare the iron, carving and detail: http://www.aoi-art.com/fittings/tsuba/F10465.html http://www.aoi-art.com/fittings/tsuba/F10560.html http://www.truefork.org/Photography/Tsuba_4.php Brian Quote
kbt Posted March 24, 2012 Author Report Posted March 24, 2012 Thats where this one came from, thanks Brian, I have a great deal to learn . Its overwhelming . Thanks Kim Quote
kbt Posted March 24, 2012 Author Report Posted March 24, 2012 I thought I had a decent theme going. I originally bought these to go on my katana, but due to ignorance they were too small for a katana . I saved them and now I am having them put on a wak . I hate to get on here and ask before I buy, it would look like I'm taking advantage of the forum . I think it will be awhile before I buy anything else if I can get the two swords I have the way I want them. Kim Quote
kbt Posted March 25, 2012 Author Report Posted March 25, 2012 John did you mean Omori and maybe Chosiu schools ? Thanks Kim Quote
John A Stuart Posted March 25, 2012 Report Posted March 25, 2012 No, Omi (Hikone-bori) as in Mogarishi or Hidenari; Kitagawa school. Choshu as in Tomotsune or Tomokiyo; some have warrior themed sukadashi-bori. John Quote
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