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So Why Does The Nakago Smell Like Ash? And Nothing Else Does


stevel48

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Hmmm. New to me wakizashi that arrived today and upon inspection the nakago smells like a camp fire. hmmmm, Suspicious yes but there is zero indication that the blade was ever in a fire as i can see.  There no scaling, no discoloration, no additional temper line, the nakago has a nice chocolate brown appearance and nothing rubs off on your hand. Yeah its suspicious but it isn't scaring me away. It was hundreds of dollars not thousands.

 

Presented as a muromachi Kongobyoe Moritaka. By all accounts the sword attributes jive with the period, koto sword traits, school and other examples of Moritaka nihonto. The mei seems genuine in that it was certainly chiseled and has aged/patina'd  at the same rate as the rest of the nakago

 

So what gives? Is it the tsuka causing the smell if a craftsman long ago used fire for whatever crazy reason when carving it? Was it a fireplace poker for someone?  The koshirae looks edo and has no ash smell to it. Is someone trying to darken the nakago with soot? The nakago is not black but a nice brown patina. Is carbon used to clean active red rust of which there are only 2 spots.

 

This is only my 4th sword in about 10 years so i'm not well versed in the sword game trickery.

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My first thought was the same as Grey's: Someone made a smoke oshigata of the nakago and mei. I have made a few in the past when the mei has been very faint and extremely difficult to read using the normal oshigata method or a camera. It is done by using candle smoke/soot. Once sufficient soot has coated the nakago, as Grey mentioned, a wide piece of plastic packing tape is pressed onto the nakago, then gently removed, leaving a soot impression of the mei and nakago on the tape, and then it is taped onto a white piece of paper to make it easier to translate. I am not sure to what extent the process has any long-term impact on the patina or nakago, unless one lets the flame touch the nakago, but I have never noticed anything different, or a soot or smoke smell myself after doing one..

 

Regards,

Bill E. Sheehan (Yoshimichi)   

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