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dkirkpatrick

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    Doug M.

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  1. Agreed, let’s be done.
  2. Scary! While it’ll never be “human” and know what it means to have words move through you it’s still crazy what it can up with. Doug
  3. Mei looks correct for this smith! Doug
  4. A little Bungo in the jungle is alright by me! Doug
  5. New collectors are so fortunate as the knowledge available is light years ahead of what was available in 80’s-90’s. My first sword was a Type 44 NCO that I couldn’t figure out there was a second mekugi so ended up unwrapping ito. Turned out to be a machine made Showa dated blade with a hadori hamon, made it hard for me to see this nie/nioi and “hada” stuff the books would talk about. Second sword again Showato with real hamon but oil so again hard to learn anything. I was lucky enough to run into Andy Quirt at a hotel buy and although he lived about 4-5hrs from me he graciously invited me to look at swords on different occasions but were often pearls before this swine until I had done enough homework to appreciate what I was looking at. In my defense, the later 90s had books with better pictures and of course the internet changed everything. There is little replacement for seeing many swords under learned eyes (something I’ve only done in limited fashion) but I have attended a handful of the major sword shows and if you live in the US and claim to want to learn about Japanese swords there is now excuse to not make this happen. Even if you are not able to purchase anything many will be gracious with there time and information. That information allowed me to be able to pull a Hankei and a Satsuma Motohira out of the woodwork-longs ways from my dad Type 44 but what a journey. Doug
  6. As with all antiques, you should buy what you like as you well may end up being the proud owner for a while. If something really sings and resonates with you chances are it will with others and should still be salable down the road. Buying purely with the idea you’ll be able to sell for same price or “worse” profit can lead to disappointment, can’t go wrong getting things you love. Doug
  7. Can’t argue with the price certainly! There’s quality and there is “art”. A beautiful oak chair can have beautiful quarter sawn striping great style and design, and be shaped just like a Gustav Stickley but if not from that shop it’s just a high quality reproduction even if done somewhat contemporaneously. Irony is probably a good smith so why didn’t sign their own name, certainly other “unknown” smiths didn’t feel the need to use gimei? Interesting questions, anyway nice piece! Doug
  8. I understand wanting to bond with history. That said, should we fire an original Brown Bess flintlock, I mean, that’s what it was made for? Low power loading, should be fine right? Sure, but black powder gets places and unnecessary wear/damage can occur. Sad when you could have gotten same experience from repro.
  9. Maybe goes without saying but no rust removal or cleaning, this could be a very important sword. Hopefully it gets the proper eyes on it and attention. Please keep us posted. Doug
  10. These were not razor sharp, geometry looks appropriate for arsenal blade, leave as is or it’ll hurt the value. Doug
  11. Additional if unrelated question; what would the value even be if polished to a reasonable hitasura with saya and hozon to unknown Soshu smith? I can’t imagine it’d be a lot more than the cost of all of that, fair argument that there is value in a nihonto saved notwithstanding.
  12. I saw this too, I said nothing because I didn’t want to embarrass him. Doug
  13. Not to hijack but this raises interesting question; how many trained polishers are there worldwide? It seems like anyone with any type of reputation has a wait list measured in years, how long can one expect to wait for a polish on a decent quality blade e.g nice mumei Shinto or a gendaito (assume able to use habaki but new shirasaya these days? Doug
  14. Always thought it was strange that gaku mei and orikeshi mei occurred implying value in preserving the smith’s identity, yet most osuriage didn’t get this treatment or even bother to re-write the smiths name. Also, I’ve always found it strange that it was considered a better solution to file the taper of a nakago and drill a new ana to make it fit an existing tsuka. Surely there we enough talented folks doing tsuka-maki that a new one that fit perfectly could be made expeditiously. Just my long held musings. Doug
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