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md02geist

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Posts posted by md02geist

  1. I liked that as it shows the excitement and cheer at the beginning of the project.

     

    The hair pulling out and tears follows in a year or so. 

     

     

     

    Well I believe tsuba will be easy, but FK / menuki may be much tougher....lol.

  2. I think it's probably a reasonable item but I feel like the price itself is high. It's an Uda school katana from the late Muromachi so not particularly rare or exceptional, that is in pretty solid shape but nothing amazing. It has no koshirae or anything although the shirasaya appears OK if nothing particularly special there either.

     

    It has a decent hada, and I personally enjoy bohi swords.

     

    I don't think it's a bad piece to have but I do think it's overpriced. I'd pay 1500 for it or so maybe? Ballpark guess.

     

    Of course I'm quite new in the world of Nihonto so please take what I say with a grain (or tablespoon) of salt. :)

  3. Rohan,

    Very ethical of you to take it back like that. Well done....good to have sellers with ethics.

    I think there are far more fire damaged and retempered swords out there in our collections than we would like to know about. They can be very difficult to spot, and there are plenty of tricks that can be done to hide that fact.

    It happens. Sorry to hear this. Maybe it will make a decent iai sword or have some other purpose.

     

     

     

    I'm sure it would still make a wonderful iai blade, and there is still quite a lot of history behind it even if it's not in the form we'd all love it to be in.

  4. So begins a daisho project.

    Two Chu-Mihara blades, both very similar in features and both from same relative time period. The sori is certainly more extreme on the wakizashi but both show Mihara features very prominently. Both in pretty good shape; they could both use a polish but they're not bad at all. Most of the specks you're seeing are dust etc that I wiped off afterwards.

    Both Hozon, purchased separately.

    A family reunion!

    Forgive the poor pictures! Quick snapshots.

    post-1387-0-37321400-1490914801_thumb.jpg

    post-1387-0-22419900-1490914813_thumb.jpg

    • Like 8
  5. You ain't kidding. I just recently got my Chu-Mihara in and it's around 600+ years old give or take....I get chills looking at it. Simply amazing. Thank god the culture was so respectful towards passing down family weapons (plus it's helpful that the warrior class ruled so strongly for such a long duration) etc.

    • Like 1
  6. There's a ton that goes into pricing; who made it, when it was made, what condition it is in, the particular market at the time being hard or soft for a certain sort of sword, whether the fittings catch someone's eyes or not, whether it's papered or not, if it has a horimono, is there some special provenance surrounding it or was it a temple sword or something, is it signed or not, is it dated or not...there's an insane amount of variables and none of it is easy to nail down.

     

    There isn't any hard and fast rule as to the value of something in this "world." You can take an educated guess on it based on past and current sales but there simply is no way to predict it properly. We've all seen swords we thought would go for a lot more sell for a pittance and vice versa.

     

    Also keep in mind sometimes ebay sales have shill bidders etc.

    Ebay isn't a great place to get a sword but you can find some good stuff there. As a new collector you probably want to go to a respected dealer such as Aoi or similar where you will be far more guaranteed to get what you believe you're purchasing.

     

    Regarding handling your sword; don't be afraid to hold the tang (nakago) with your bare hands. Never touch the blade with your bare hands. Keep a light sheen of choji oil on the blade (but not a ton of it, don't let it goop up on you). Don't use uchiko (the powdered ball) on it please.

     

    If anyone thinks anything I've said is wrong here please do feel free to speak up, I am still in the early stages of learning too.

     

     

    By the way: show us your sword! I love pictures and I'm sure a lot of other folk here do too.

    • Like 2
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